4.8 Article

Improvement of liver injury and survival by JNK2 and iNOS deficiency in liver transplants from cardiac death mice

Journal

JOURNAL OF HEPATOLOGY
Volume 63, Issue 1, Pages 68-74

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhep.2015.02.017

Keywords

c-Jun N-terminal kinase; Inducible nitric oxide synthase; Liver transplantation; Mitochondrial permeability transition; Non-heart-beating donors; Primary non-function; Sab

Funding

  1. National Institute of Health [DK70844, DK037034]
  2. Chinese National Natural Foundation [81470878]

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Background & Aims: Inclusion of liver grafts from cardiac death donors (CDD) would increase the availability of donor livers but is hampered by a higher risk of primary non-function. Here, we seek to determine mechanisms that contribute to primary non-function of liver grafts from CDD with the goal to develop strategies for improved function and outcome, focusing on c-Jun-N-terminal kinase (JNK) activation and mitochondrial depolarization, two known mediators of graft failure. Methods: Livers explanted from wild-type, inducible nitric oxide synthase knockout (iNOS(-/-)), JNK1(-/-) or JNK2(-/-) mice after 45-min aorta clamping were implanted into wild-type recipients. Mitochondrial depolarization was detected by intravital confocal microscopy in living recipients. Results: After transplantation of wild-type CDD livers, graft iNOS expression and 3-nitrotyrosine adducts increased, but hepatic endothelial NOS expression was unchanged. Graft injury and dysfunction were substantially higher in CDD grafts than in non-CDD grafts. iNOS deficiency and inhibition attenuated injury and improved function and survival of CDD grafts. JNK1/2 and apoptosis signal-regulating kinase-1 activation increased markedly in wild-type CDD grafts, which was blunted by iNOS deficiency. JNK inhibition and JNK2 deficiency, but not JNK1 deficiency, decreased injury and improved function and survival of CDD grafts. Mitochondrial depolarization and binding of phospho-JNK2 to Sab, a mitochondrial protein linked to the mitochondrial permeability transition, were higher in CDD than in non-CDD grafts. iNOS deficiency, JNK inhibition and JNK2 deficiency all decreased mitochondrial depolarization and blunted ATP depletion in CDD grafts. JNK inhibition and deficiency did not decrease 3-nitrotyrosine adducts in CDD grafts. Conclusion: The iNOS-JNK2-Sab pathway promotes CDD graft failure via increased mitochondrial depolarization, and is an attractive target to improve liver function and survival in CDD liver transplantation recipients. (C) 2015 European Association for the Study of the Liver. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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