4.7 Article

B-13 progenitor-derived hepatocytes (B-13/H cells) model lipid dysregulation in response to drugs and chemicals

Journal

TOXICOLOGY
Volume 386, Issue -, Pages 120-132

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.tox.2017.05.014

Keywords

LXR; AR42J-B13; Steatosis; Phospholipidosis; T0901317; In vitro and alternatives

Funding

  1. ITTP studentship award from the Medical Research Council
  2. European Foundation for Alcohol Research [EA1402]
  3. Alternatives Research and Development Foundation
  4. European Commission FP7 program grant'D-Liver' (EC) [287596]
  5. Medical Research Council [1520769] Funding Source: researchfish
  6. National Centre for the Replacement, Refinement and Reduction of Animals in Research (NC3Rs) [NC/K500471/1] Funding Source: researchfish

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Lipid dysregulation is a common hepatic adverse outcome after exposure to toxic drugs and chemicals. A donor free rat hepatocyte-like (B-13/H) cell was therefore examined as an in vitro model for investigating mechanisms. The B-13/H cell irreversibly accumulated triglycerides (steatosis) in a time- and dose-dependent manner when exposed to fatty acids, an effect that was potentiated by the combined addition of hyperglycaemic levels of glucose and insulin. B-13/H cells also expressed the LXR nuclear receptors and exposure to their activators - T0901317 or GW3965 - induced luciferase expression from a transfected LXR-regulated reporter gene construct and steatosis in a dose-dependent manner with T0901317. Exposing B-13/H cells to a variety of cationic amphiphilic drugs - but not other hepatotoxins - also resulted in a time- and dose-dependent accumulation of phospholipids (phospholipidosis), an effect that was reduced by over-expression of lysosomal phospholipase A2. Through application of this model, hepatotoxin methapyrilene exposure was shown to induce phospholipidosis in both B-13 and B-13/H cells in a time- and dose-dependent manner. However, methapyrilene was only toxic to B-13/H cells and inhibitors of hepatotoxicity enhanced phospholipidosis, suggesting phospholipidosis is not a pathway in toxicity for this withdrawn drug. In contrast, pre-existing steatosis had minimal effect on methapyrilene hepatotoxicity in B-13/H cells. These data demonstrate that the donor free B-13 cell system for generating hepatocyte-like cells may be employed in studies of fatty acid- and LXR activator-induced steatosis and phospholipidosis and in the dissection of pathways leading to adverse outcomes such as hepatotoxicity.

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