Volume 20, Issue 5 pp. 1237-1241
Laboratory Investigation
Free Access

Hepatocyte proliferation and gene expression induced by triiodothyronine in vivo and in vitro

Antonio Francavilla M.D.

Corresponding Author

Antonio Francavilla M.D.

Department of Gastroenterology, University of Bari, 70100 Bari, Italy

VA Medical Center, University Drive C, Building 6, Room 110, Pittsburgh, PA 15240===Search for more papers by this author
Brian I. Carr

Brian I. Carr

Department of Surgery, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15240

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Alessandro Azzarone

Alessandro Azzarone

Department of Gastroenterology, University of Bari, 70100 Bari, Italy

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Lorenzo Polimeno

Lorenzo Polimeno

Department of Gastroenterology, University of Bari, 70100 Bari, Italy

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Ziqiu Wang

Ziqiu Wang

Department of Surgery, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15240

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David H. Van Thiel

David H. Van Thiel

Department of Surgery, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15240

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Vladimir Subbotin

Vladimir Subbotin

Department of Surgery, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15240

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John G. Prelich

John G. Prelich

Department of Surgery, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15240

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Thomas E. Starzl

Thomas E. Starzl

Department of Surgery, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15240

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First published: November 1994
Citations: 82

Abstract

Subcutaneous injections of hormone triiodothyronine in rats resulted in peak blood levels at 24 hr with return to baseline by 96 hr. The injections stimulated a liver regeneration response that resembled in timing and in magnitude of DNA synthesis (peak, 24 hr) that induced by 40% hepatic resection. The principal proliferation was of hepatocytes. Although there were some temporal differences from the gene expression of transforming growth factor-α, transforming growth factor-β, and c-Ha-ras that are known to follow partial hepatectomy, the overall profile of these changes was similar to those after partial resection. The effect was liver specific and could be reproduced three times with no diminution in response in the same animal with injections at 10-day intervals. No response was detected in kidney or intestine. This effect in intact animals contrasted with the minimal ability of triiodothyronine to stimulate hepatocytes in culture. However, when the culture medium was enriched with epidermal growth factor, there was a dose-related response to triiodothyronine. The totality of these experiments provides a preliminary basis for the creation with pharmacological techniques of an in vivo hyperplastic hepatic condition permissive of transfection of new genes, as an alternative to partial hepatectomy. Although triiodothyronine was the test agent used, other hepatic growth factors singly or in combination could be candidates for this purpose. (Hepatology 1994;20:1237–1241).

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