Volume 20, Issue 5 pp. 1247-1254
Laboratory Investigation
Free Access

Human hepatocytes are more resistant than rat hepatocytes to Anoxia-reoxygenation injury

Paolo Caraceni

Paolo Caraceni

Department of Surgery, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15261

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Antonio Gasbarrini

Antonio Gasbarrini

Department of Surgery, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15261

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Andreas Nussler

Andreas Nussler

Department of Surgery, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15261

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Mauricio Di Silvio

Mauricio Di Silvio

Department of Surgery, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15261

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Fabio Bartoli

Fabio Bartoli

Department of Surgery, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15261

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Andre B. Borle

Andre B. Borle

Department of Cell Biology and Physiology, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15261

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David H. Van Thiel M.D.

Corresponding Author

David H. Van Thiel M.D.

Oklahoma Transplant Institute, Baptist Medical Center of Oklahoma, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73112

Oklahoma Transplant Institute, Baptist Medical Center of Oklahoma, 3300 Northwest Expressway, Oklahoma City, OK 73112===Search for more papers by this author
First published: November 1994
Citations: 14

Abstract

We performed this study to determine whether perfused isolated human and rat hepatocytes have different sensitivities to anoxia-reoxygenation injury. Oxygen free radicals were detected by lucigenin-enhanced chemiluminescence. Lipid peroxidation was assessed by measuring malondialdehyde release. Cell injury was evaluated by measuring lactate dehydrogenase release and trypan blue uptake. During the control period, lucigenin-enhanced chemiluminescence, malondialdehyde and lactate dehydrogenase release and trypan blue uptake were similar in rat and human hepatocytes. During 3.5 hr of anoxia, lucigenin-enhanced chemiluminescence decreased to background levels and malondialdehyde release remained constant in both groups. In contrast, lactate dehydrogenase release increased eightfold in rat hepatocytes but only threefold in human hepatocytes. With reoxygenation after 2.5 hr of anoxia, in rat hepatocytes lucigenin-enhanced chemiluminescence increased 13-fold within 15 min and then declined toward control levels. Malondialdehyde release doubled after 1 hr of reoxygenation. The rate of lactate dehydrogenase release increased to a level almost twice that observed in cells kept continuously anoxic. In contrast, with human hepatocytes lucigenin-enhanced chemiluminescence increased only fourfold, whereas malondialdehyde and lactate dehydrogenase releases did not differ significantly from those levels measured in cells perfused continuously under anoxic conditions. At the end of the experiment, the increase in trypan blue uptake was significantly greater with rat hepatocytes than with human hepatocytes. These results demonstrate that (a) during reoxygenation following 2.5 hr of anoxia, isolated human hepatocytes generate fewer oxygen free radical, and lipoperoxides than do rat hepatocytes, and (b) human hepatocytes are more resistant to cell injury during anoxia-reoxygenation than are rat hepatocytes. (Hepatology 1994;20:1247–1254).

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