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Query: UMLS:C0019158 (
hepatitis
)
30,205
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The putative role of IL-4 in human and animal models of
hepatitis
has not yet been directly determined. We now report that direct expression of IL-4 in the liver of rats or mice using recombinant adenoviruses coding for rat or mouse IL-4 (AdrIL-4 and AdmIL-4, respectively) results in a lethal, dose-dependent
hepatitis
. The
hepatitis
induced by IL-4 was characterized by hepatocyte apoptosis and a massive monocyte/macrophage infiltrate. IL-4-induced
hepatitis
was independent of T cell-mediated immune responses.
Hepatitis
occurred even after gene transfer of IL-4 into nude rats, CD8-depleted rats, cyclosporine A-treated rats, or recombinase-activating gene 2(-/-) immunodeficient mice. Peripheral depletion of leukocytes using high doses of cyclophosphamide, and/or the specific depletion of liver macrophages with liposome-encapsulated dichloromethylene diphosphonate in rats did not block lethal IL-4-induced
hepatitis
. Direct transduction of hepatocytes with adenoviruses was not essential, since injection of AdrIL-4 into the hind limb induced an identical
hepatitis
. Finally, primary rat hepatocytes in culture also showed apoptosis when cultured in the presence of rIL-4. IL-4-dependent
hepatitis
was associated with increases in the intrahepatic levels of
IFN-gamma
, TNF-alpha, and Fas ligand. Administration of AdmIL-4 to
IFN-gamma
, TNF-alpha receptor type I, or TNF-alpha receptor type II knockout mice also resulted in lethal
hepatitis
, whereas a moderate protection was observed in Fas-deficient lpr mice. IL-4-dependent hepatocyte apoptosis could be abolished by treatment with caspase inhibitory peptides. Our results thus demonstrate that IL-4 causes hepatocyte apoptosis, which is only partially dependent on the activation of Apo-1-Fas signaling and is largely independent of any immune cells in the liver.
...
PMID:Lethal hepatitis after gene transfer of IL-4 in the liver is independent of immune responses and dependent on apoptosis of hepatocytes: a rodent model of IL-4-induced hepatitis. 1129 Aug 7
Administration of Con A induces severe injury to hepatocytes in mice and is considered to be a model for human
hepatitis
. In the current study, we investigated the role of CD44 in Con A-induced
hepatitis
. Intravenous administration of Con A (20 mg/kg) caused 100% mortality in C57BL/6 CD44-knockout (KO) mice, although it was not lethal in C57BL/6 CD44 wild-type (WT) mice. Administration of lower doses of Con A (12 mg/kg body weight) into CD44 WT mice induced
hepatitis
as evident from increased plasma aspartate aminotransferase levels accompanied by active infiltration of mononuclear cells and neutrophils, and significant induction of apoptosis in the liver. Interestingly, CD44 KO mice injected with similar doses of Con A exhibited more severe acute suppurative
hepatitis
. Transfer of spleen cells from Con A-injected CD44 KO mice into CD44 WT mice induced higher levels of
hepatitis
when compared with transfer of similar cells from CD44 WT mice into CD44 WT mice. The increased
hepatitis
seen in CD44 KO mice was accompanied by increased production of cytokines such as TNF-alpha, IL-2 and
IFN-gamma
, but not Fas or Fas ligand. The increased susceptibility of CD44 KO mice to
hepatitis
correlated with the observation that T cells from CD44 KO mice were more resistant to activation-induced cell death when compared with the CD44 WT mice. Together, these data demonstrate that activated T cells use CD44 to undergo apoptosis, and dysregulation in this pathway could lead to increased pathogenesis in a number of diseases, including
hepatitis
.
...
PMID:CD44-deficient mice exhibit enhanced hepatitis after concanavalin A injection: evidence for involvement of CD44 in activation-induced cell death. 1134 3
Autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) in humans arises spontaneously in genetically susceptible individuals and is associated with the presence of Th1 cells in the liver. The understanding of AIH has advanced more slowly than that of other organ-specific autoimmune diseases, however, largely because of the lack of an appropriate animal model. We now describe a new mouse model characterized by spontaneous development of necroinflammatory
hepatitis
that is restricted by genetic background. Mice deficient in the immunomodulatory cytokine TGF-beta1 were extensively back-bred to the BALB/c background. The BALB/c background dramatically modified the phenotype of TGF-beta1(-/-) mice: specifically, BALB/c-TGF-beta1(-/-) mice developed a lethal necroinflammatory
hepatitis
that was not observed in TGF-beta1(-/-) mice on a different genetic background. BALB/c background TGF-beta1(-/-) livers contained large numbers of activated CD4(+) T cells that produced large quantities of
IFN-gamma
, but little IL-4, identifying them as Th1 cells. BALB/c background TGF-beta1(-/-)/
IFN-gamma
(-/-) double knockout mice, generated by cross-breeding, did not develop necroinflammatory
hepatitis
, demonstrating that
IFN-gamma
is mechanistically required for its pathogenesis. This represents the first murine model of
hepatitis
that develops spontaneously, is restricted by genetic background, and is dependent upon the Th1 cytokine
IFN-gamma
, and that thus recapitulates these important aspects of AIH.
...
PMID:Genetic regulation of autoimmune disease: BALB/c background TGF-beta 1-deficient mice develop necroinflammatory IFN-gamma-dependent hepatitis. 1134 67
Suppressor of cytokine signaling-1 (SOCS-1), also known as STAT-induced STAT inhibitor-1 (SSI-1), is a negative feedback molecule for cytokine signaling, and its in vivo deletion induces fulminant
hepatitis
. However, elimination of the STAT1 or STAT6 gene or deletion of NKT cells substantially prevented severe
hepatitis
in SOCS-1-deficient mice, while administration of
IFN-gamma
and IL-4 accelerated its development. SOCS-1 deficiency not only sustained
IFN-gamma
/IL-4 signaling but also eliminated the cross-inhibitory action of
IFN-gamma
on IL-4 signaling. These results suggest that SOCS-1 deficiency-induced persistent activation of STAT1 and STAT6, which would be inhibited by SOCS-1 under normal conditions, may induce abnormal activation of NKT cells, thus leading to lethal pathological changes in SOCS-1-deficient mice.
...
PMID:SOCS-1/SSI-1-deficient NKT cells participate in severe hepatitis through dysregulated cross-talk inhibition of IFN-gamma and IL-4 signaling in vivo. 1137 56
Woodchuck
hepatitis
virus (WHV) and hepatitis B virus (HBV) are closely similar with respect to genomic organization, host antiviral responses, and pathobiology of the infection. T-cell immunity against viral nucleocapsid (HBcAg or WHcAg) has been shown to play a critical role in viral clearance and protection against infection. Here we show that vaccination of healthy woodchucks by gene gun bombardment with a plasmid coding for WHcAg (pCw) stimulates proliferation of WHcAg-specific T cells but that these cells do not produce significant levels of gamma interferon (
IFN-gamma
) upon antigen stimulation. In addition, animals vaccinated with pCw alone were not protected against WHV inoculation. In order to induce a Th1 cytokine response, another group of woodchucks was immunized with pCw together with another plasmid coding for woodchuck interleukin-12 (IL-12). These animals exhibited WHcAg-specific T-cell proliferation with high
IFN-gamma
production and were protected against challenge with WHV, showing no viremia or low-level transient viremia after WHV inoculation. In conclusion, gene gun immunization with WHV core generates a non-Th1 type of response which does not protect against experimental infection. However, steering the immune response to a Th1 cytokine profile by IL-12 coadministration achieves protective immunity. These data demonstrate a crucial role of Th1 responses in the control of hepadnavirus replication and suggest new approaches to inducing protection against HBV infection.
...
PMID:Protection against woodchuck hepatitis virus (WHV) infection by gene gun coimmunization with WHV core and interleukin-12. 1153 70
Intracerebral infection of mice with mouse
hepatitis
virus (MHV) results in an acute encephalomyelitis followed by a chronic demyelinating disease with clinical and histological similarities with the human demyelinating disease multiple sclerosis (MS). Following MHV infection, chemokines including CXC chemokine ligand (CXCL)10 (IFN inducible protein 10 kDa), CXCL9 (monokine induced by
IFN-gamma
), and CC chemokine ligand 5 (RANTES) are expressed during both acute and chronic stages of disease suggesting a role for these molecules in disease exacerbation. Previous studies have shown that during the acute phase of infection, T lymphocytes are recruited into the CNS by the chemokines CXCL10 and CXCL9. In the present study, MHV-infected mice with established demyelination were treated with antisera against these two chemokines, and disease severity was assessed. Treatment with anti-CXCL10 reduced CD4+ T lymphocyte and macrophage invasion, diminished expression of
IFN-gamma
and CC chemokine ligand 5, inhibited progression of demyelination, and increased remyelination. Anti-CXCL10 treatment also resulted in an impediment of clinical disease progression that was characterized by a dramatic improvement in neurological function. Treatment with antisera against CXCL9 was without effect, demonstrating a critical role for CXCL10 in inflammatory demyelination in this model. These findings document a novel therapeutic strategy using Ab-mediated neutralization of a key chemokine as a possible treatment for chronic human inflammatory demyelinating diseases such as MS.
...
PMID:Neutralization of the chemokine CXCL10 reduces inflammatory cell invasion and demyelination and improves neurological function in a viral model of multiple sclerosis. 1156 31
In the present study, we evaluated the role of CCR2 in a model of viral-induced neurologic disease. An orchestrated expression of chemokines, including the CCR2 ligands monocyte chemoattractant protein-1/CCL2 and monocyte chemoattractant protein-3/CCL7, occurs within the CNS following infection with mouse
hepatitis
virus (MHV). Infection of mice lacking CCR2 (CCR2(-/-)) with MHV resulted in increased mortality and enhanced viral recovery from the brain that correlated with reduced (p < or = 0.04) T cell and macrophage/microglial (determined by F4/80 Ag expression, p < or = 0.004) infiltration into the CNS. Moreover, MHV-infected CCR2(-/-) mice displayed a significant decrease in Th1-associated factors
IFN-gamma
(p < or = 0.001) and RANTES/CCL5 (p < or = 0.002) within the CNS as compared with CCR2(+/+) mice. Further, peripheral CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells from immunized CCR2(-/-) mice displayed a marked reduction in
IFN-gamma
production in response to viral Ag and did not migrate into the CNS of MHV-infected recombination-activating gene (RAG)1(-/-) mice following adoptive transfer. In addition, macrophage/microglial infiltration into the CNS of RAG1(-/-) mice receiving CCR2(-/-) splenocytes was reduced (p < or = 0.05), which correlated with a reduction in the severity of demyelination (p < or = 0.001) as compared with RAG1(-/-) mice receiving splenocytes from CCR2(+/+) mice. Collectively, these results indicate an important role for CCR2 in host defense and disease by regulating leukocyte activation and trafficking.
...
PMID:Lack of CCR2 results in increased mortality and impaired leukocyte activation and trafficking following infection of the central nervous system with a neurotropic coronavirus. 1159 87
Intracerebral inoculation with mouse
hepatitis
virus strain A59 results in viral replication in the CNS and liver. To investigate whether B cells are important for controlling mouse
hepatitis
virus strain A59 infection, we infected muMT mice who lack membrane-bound IgM and therefore mature B lymphocytes. Infectious virus peaked and was cleared from the livers of muMT and wild-type mice. However, while virus was cleared from the CNS of wild-type mice, virus persisted in the CNS of muMT mice. To determine how B cells mediate viral clearance, we first assessed CD4(+) T cell activation in the absence of B cells as APC. CD4(+) T cells express wild-type levels of CD69 after infection in muMT mice.
IFN-gamma
production in response to viral Ag in muMT mice was also normal during acute infection, but was decreased 31 days postinfection compared with that in wild-type mice. The role of Ab in viral clearance was also assessed. In wild-type mice plasma cells appeared in the CNS around the time that virus is cleared. The muMT mice that received A59-specific Ab had decreased virus, while mice with B cells deficient in Ab secretion did not clear virus from the CNS. Viral persistence was not detected in FcR or complement knockout mice. These data suggest that clearance of infectious mouse
hepatitis
virus strain A59 from the CNS requires Ab production and perhaps B cell support of T cells; however, virus is cleared from the liver without the involvement of Abs or B cells.
...
PMID:Antibody is required for clearance of infectious murine hepatitis virus A59 from the central nervous system, but not the liver. 1167 40
The virological and immunological features of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection were studied weekly for 6 months after accidental needlestick exposure in five health care workers, four of whom developed acute hepatitis that progressed to chronicity while one subject cleared the virus. In all subjects, viremia was first detectable within 1-2 weeks of inoculation, 1 month or more before the appearance of virus-specific T cells. The subject who cleared the virus experienced a prolonged episode of acute hepatitis that coincided with a CD38+
IFN-gamma
- CD8+ T cell response to HCV and a small reduction in viremia. Subsequently, a strong CD4+ T cell response emerged and the CD8+ T cells became CD38- and started producing
IFN-gamma
in response to HCV, coinciding with a rapid 100,000-fold decrease in viremia that occurred without a corresponding surge of disease activity. Chronic infection developed in two subjects who failed to produce a significant T cell response and in two other subjects who initially mounted strong CD4+ T cell responses that ultimately waned. In all subjects, viremia was higher at the peak of acute hepatitis than it was when the disease began, and the disease improved during the viremia. These results provide the first insight into the host-virus relationship in humans during the incubation phase of acute HCV infection, and they provide the only insight to date into the virological and immunological characteristics of clinically asymptomatic acute HCV infection, the commonest manifestation of this disease. In addition, the results suggest that the vigor and quality of the antiviral T cell response determines the outcome of acute HCV infection, that the ability of HCV to outpace the T cell response may contribute to its tendency to persist; that the onset of
hepatitis
coincides with the onset of the CD8+ T cell response, that disease pathogenesis and viral clearance are mediated by different CD8+ T cell populations that control HCV by both cytolytic and noncytolytic mechanisms, and that there are different pathways to viral persistence in asymptomatic and symptomatic acute HCV infection.
...
PMID:Determinants of viral clearance and persistence during acute hepatitis C virus infection. 1171 47
Gamma interferon (
IFN-gamma
) is an important mediator with multiple functions in the host defense against viral infection.
IFN-gamma
, in concert with tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha), leads to a remarkable reduction of intrahepatic replication intermediates and specific mRNAs of hepatitis B virus (HBV) by a noncytolytic mechanism in the transgenic mouse model. Thus, it is rational to evaluate the potential value of
IFN-gamma
for the treatment of chronic HBV infection. In the present study, we expressed recombinant woodchuck
IFN-gamma
(wIFN-gamma) in Escherichia coli and mammalian cells. wIFN-gamma protected woodchuck cells against infection of murine encephalomyocarditis virus in a species-specific manner. It upregulated the mRNA level of the woodchuck major histocompatibility complex class I (MHC-I) heavy chain in permanent woodchuck WH12/6 cells and regulated differentially the gene expression. However, the level of the replication intermediates and specific RNAs of woodchuck
hepatitis
virus (WHV) in persistently WHV-infected primary woodchuck hepatocytes did not change despite a treatment with 1,000 U of wIFN-gamma per ml or with a combination of wIFN-gamma and woodchuck TNF-alpha. Rather, hepatocytes derived from chronic carriers had an elevated level of the MHC-I heavy-chain mRNAs, most probably due to the exposure to inflammatory cytokines in vivo. Treatment with high doses of wIFN-gamma led to an abnormal cell morphology and loss of hepatocytes. Thus, wIFN-gamma regulates the gene expression in woodchuck hepatocytes but could not deplete WHV replication intermediates and mRNAs in persistently infected hepatocytes. The cellular response to wIFN-gamma may be changed in hepatocytes from chronically WHV-infected woodchucks. It should be clarified in the future whether the continuous exposure of hepatocytes to inflammatory cytokines or the presence of viral proteins leads to changes of the cellular response to wIFN-gamma.
...
PMID:Woodchuck gamma interferon upregulates major histocompatibility complex class I transcription but is unable to deplete woodchuck hepatitis virus replication intermediates and RNAs in persistently infected woodchuck primary hepatocytes. 1173 71
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