Acute Liver Injury Is Independent of B Cells or Immunoglobulin M

Acute liver injury is a clinically important pathology and results in the release of Danger Associated Molecular Patterns, which initiate an immune response. Withdrawal of the injurious agent and curtailing any pathogenic secondary immune response may allow spontaneous resolution of injury. The role...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2015-09, Vol.10 (9), p.e0138688
Hauptverfasser: Richards, James A, Bucsaiova, Martina, Hesketh, Emily E, Ventre, Chiara, Henderson, Neil C, Simpson, Kenneth, Bellamy, Christopher O C, Howie, Sarah E M, Anderton, Stephen M, Hughes, Jeremy, Wigmore, Stephen J
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Acute liver injury is a clinically important pathology and results in the release of Danger Associated Molecular Patterns, which initiate an immune response. Withdrawal of the injurious agent and curtailing any pathogenic secondary immune response may allow spontaneous resolution of injury. The role B cells and Immunoglobulin M (IgM) play in acute liver injury is largely unknown and it was proposed that B cells and/or IgM would play a significant role in its pathogenesis. Tissue from 3 models of experimental liver injury (ischemia-reperfusion injury, concanavalin A hepatitis and paracetamol-induced liver injury) and patients transplanted following paracetamol overdose were stained for evidence of IgM deposition. Mice deficient in B cells (and IgM) were used to dissect out the role B cells and/or IgM played in the development or resolution of injury. Serum transfer into mice lacking IgM was used to establish the role IgM plays in injury. Significant deposition of IgM was seen in the explanted livers of patients transplanted following paracetamol overdose as well as in 3 experimental models of acute liver injury (ischemia-reperfusion injury, concanavalin A hepatitis and paracetamol-induced liver injury). Serum transfer into IgM-deficient mice failed to reconstitute injury (p = 0.66), despite successful engraftment of IgM. Mice deficient in both T and B cells (RAG1-/-) mice (p
ISSN:1932-6203
1932-6203
DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0138688