Science, Vol.274, No.5291, 1379-1383, 1996
Liver-Failure and Defective Hepatocyte Regeneration in Interleukin-6-Deficient Mice
Liver regeneration stimulated by a loss of liver mass leads to hepatocyte and nonparenchymal cell proliferation and rapid restoration of liver parenchyma. Mice with targeted disruption of the interleukin-6 (IL-6) gene had impaired liver regeneration characterized by liver necrosis and failure. There was a blunted DNA synthetic response in hepatocytes of these mice but not in nonparenchymal liver cells. Furthermore; there were discrete G(1) phase (prereplicative stage in the cell cycle) abnormalities including absence of STAT3 (signal transducer and activator of transcription protein 3) activation and depressed AP-1, Myc, and cyclin D1 expression. Treatment of IL-6-deficient mice with a single preoperative dose of IL-6 returned STAT3 binding, gene expression, and hepatocyte proliferation to near normal and prevented liver damage, establishing that IL-6 is a critical component of the regenerative response.
Keywords:EPIDERMAL GROWTH-FACTOR;NECROSIS-FACTOR RECEPTOR;FACTOR KAPPA-B;MOUSE-LIVER;TYROSINE PHOSPHORYLATION;TRANSCRIPTION FACTOR;SIGNAL-TRANSDUCTION;PARTIAL-HEPATECTOMY;RAPID ACTIVATION;SERUM LEVELS