Background & Aims: Liver ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury is a frequent cause of organ dysfunction. Loss of the oxygen sensor prolyl hydroxylase domain enzyme 1 (PHD1) causes tolerance of skeletal muscle to hypoxia. We assessed whether loss or short-term silencing of PHD1 could likewise induce hypoxia tolerance in hepatocytes and protect them against hepatic I/R damage. Methods: Hepatic ischemia was induced in mice by clamping of the portal vessels of the left lateral liver lobe; 90 minutes later livers were reperfused for 8 hours for I/R experiments. Hepatocyte damage following ischemia or I/R was investigated in PHD1-deficient (PHD1-/-) and wild-type mice or following short hairpin RNA-mediated short-term inhibition of PHD1 in vivo. Results: PHD1-/- livers were largely protected against acute ischemia or I/R injury. Among mice subjected to hepatic I/R followed by surgical resection of all nonischemic liver lobes, more than half of wild-type mice succumbed, whereas all PHD1-/- mice survived. Also, short-term inhibition of PHD1 through RNA interference-mediated silencing provided protection against I/R. Knockdown of PHD1 also induced hypoxia tolerance of hepatocytes in vitro. Mechanistically, loss of PHD1 decreased production of oxidative stress, which likely relates to a decrease in oxygen consumption as a result of a reprogramming of hepatocellular metabolism. Conclusions: Loss of PHD1 provided tolerance of hepatocytes to acute hypoxia and protected them against I/R-damage. Short-term inhibition of PHD1 is a novel therapeutic approach to reducing or preventing I/R-induced liver injury. © 2010 AGA Institute.

Loss or Silencing of the PHD1 Prolyl Hydroxylase Protects Livers of Mice Against Ischemia/Reperfusion Injury

Mazzone M.;
2010-01-01

Abstract

Background & Aims: Liver ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury is a frequent cause of organ dysfunction. Loss of the oxygen sensor prolyl hydroxylase domain enzyme 1 (PHD1) causes tolerance of skeletal muscle to hypoxia. We assessed whether loss or short-term silencing of PHD1 could likewise induce hypoxia tolerance in hepatocytes and protect them against hepatic I/R damage. Methods: Hepatic ischemia was induced in mice by clamping of the portal vessels of the left lateral liver lobe; 90 minutes later livers were reperfused for 8 hours for I/R experiments. Hepatocyte damage following ischemia or I/R was investigated in PHD1-deficient (PHD1-/-) and wild-type mice or following short hairpin RNA-mediated short-term inhibition of PHD1 in vivo. Results: PHD1-/- livers were largely protected against acute ischemia or I/R injury. Among mice subjected to hepatic I/R followed by surgical resection of all nonischemic liver lobes, more than half of wild-type mice succumbed, whereas all PHD1-/- mice survived. Also, short-term inhibition of PHD1 through RNA interference-mediated silencing provided protection against I/R. Knockdown of PHD1 also induced hypoxia tolerance of hepatocytes in vitro. Mechanistically, loss of PHD1 decreased production of oxidative stress, which likely relates to a decrease in oxygen consumption as a result of a reprogramming of hepatocellular metabolism. Conclusions: Loss of PHD1 provided tolerance of hepatocytes to acute hypoxia and protected them against I/R-damage. Short-term inhibition of PHD1 is a novel therapeutic approach to reducing or preventing I/R-induced liver injury. © 2010 AGA Institute.
2010
138
3
1143
e2
Ischemia/Reperfusion; PHD1; Prolyl Hydroxylase; Adaptation, Physiological; Animals; Basic Helix-Loop-Helix Transcription Factors; Cell Hypoxia; Cells, Cultured; Disease Models, Animal; Hepatocytes; Hypoxia-Inducible Factor 1, alpha Subunit; Liver; Liver Diseases; Male; Mice; Mice, Knockout; Oxidative Stress; Oxygen Consumption; Procollagen-Proline Dioxygenase; Reperfusion Injury; Time Factors; Gene Knockdown Techniques; RNA Interference
Schneider M.; Van Geyte K.; Fraisl P.; Kiss J.; Aragones J.; Mazzone M.; Mairbaurl H.; De Bock K.; Jeoung N.H.; Mollenhauer M.; Georgiadou M.; Bishop T.; Roncal C.; Sutherland A.; Jordan B.; Gallez B.; Weitz J.; Harris R.A.; Maxwell P.; Baes M.; Ratcliffe P.; Carmeliet P.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2318/1841089
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