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  • Title: Differential regulation of rodent hepatocyte and oval cell proliferation by interferon gamma.
    Author: Brooling JT, Campbell JS, Mitchell C, Yeoh GC, Fausto N.
    Journal: Hepatology; 2005 Apr; 41(4):906-15. PubMed ID: 15799032.
    Abstract:
    Hepatocytes and intrahepatic progenitor cells (oval cells) have similar responses to most growth factors but rarely proliferate together. Oval cells constitute a reserve compartment that is activated when hepatocyte proliferation is inhibited. Interferon gamma (IFN-gamma) increases in liver injury that involves oval cell responses, but it is not upregulated during liver regeneration after partial hepatectomy. Based on these observations, we used well-characterized lines of hepatocytes (AML-12 cells) and oval cells (LE-6 cells) to investigate the potential mechanisms that regulate differential growth responses in hepatocytes and oval cells. We show that IFN-gamma blocks hepatocyte proliferation in vivo, and that in combination with either tumor necrosis factor (TNF) or lipopolysaccharide (LPS), it causes cell cycle arrest in hepatocytes but stimulates oval cell proliferation in cultured cells. The hepatocyte cell cycle arrest is reversible, is p53-independent, and is not associated with apoptosis. Treatment of AML-12 hepatocytes with IFN-gamma/LPS or IFN-gamma/TNF, but not with individual cytokines, induced NO synthase and generated NO, while similarly treated oval cells produced little if any NO. Generation of NO by an NO donor reproduced the inhibitory effect of the cytokine combinations on AML-12 cell replication, while NO inhibitors abolish the replication deficiency. In conclusion, we propose that IFN-gamma, in conjunction with TNF or LPS, can both inhibit hepatocyte proliferation through the generation of NO and stimulate oval cell replication. The response of hepatocytes and oval cells to cytokine combinations may contribute to the differential proliferation of these cells in hepatic growth processes.
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