Hepatitis C virus-replicating hepatocytes induce fibrogenic activation of hepatic stellate cells.
Gastroenterology
; 129(1): 246-58, 2005 Jul.
Article
en En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-16012951
BACKGROUND & AIMS: The mechanism by which hepatitis C virus induces liver fibrosis remains largely obscure. To characterize the profibrogenic potential of hepatitis C virus, we used the hepatitis C virus replicon cell line Huh-7 5-15, which stably expresses the nonstructural hepatitis C virus genes NS3 through NS5B, and hepatic stellate cells as fibrogenic effector cells. METHODS: Rat and human hepatic stellate cells were incubated with conditioned media from replicon cells, and expression of fibrosis-related genes was quantified by using real-time polymerase chain reaction, protein, and functional assays. Transforming growth factor beta1 activity was determined by bioassay. RESULTS: Hepatitis C virus replicon cells release factors that differentially modulate hepatic stellate cell expression of key genes involved in liver fibrosis in a clearly profibrogenic way, up-regulating procollagen alpha1(I) and procollagen alpha1(III) and down-regulating fibrolytic matrix metalloproteinases. Transforming growth factor beta1 expression and bioactivity were increased severalfold in hepatitis C virus-replicating vs mock-transfected hepatoma cells. However, transforming growth factor beta1 activity was responsible for only 50% of the profibrogenic activity. CONCLUSIONS: Hepatitis C virus nonstructural genes induce an increased expression of transforming growth factor beta1 and other profibrogenic factors in infected hepatocytes. The direct induction of profibrogenic mediators by hepatitis C virus in infected hepatocytes explains the frequent observation of progressive liver fibrosis despite a low level of inflammation and suggests novel targets for antifibrotic therapies in chronic hepatitis C.
Buscar en Google
Banco de datos:
MEDLINE
Asunto principal:
Hepatitis C
/
Hepacivirus
/
Hepatocitos
Límite:
Animals
/
Humans
Idioma:
En
Revista:
Gastroenterology
Año:
2005
Tipo del documento:
Article
País de afiliación:
Alemania