| Literature DB >> 22485094 |
Bruno Christ1, Sandra Brückner.
Abstract
Without therapeutic intervention acute liver failure (ALF) is the consequence of a progredient destruction of the liver parenchyma due to metabolic exhaustion of the hepatocytes. Perivenous hepatocytes are responsible for the detoxification of noxious compounds via the cytochrome P450 enzyme system. Liver transplantation is the only remaining therapeutic option in the end-stage of the disease. Assuming that metabolic capacity could be provided by healthy hepatocytes and thus substitute for the genuine parenchymal cells hepatocyte transplantation since quite some time is considered to be an alternative to whole liver transplantation. While this hypothesis achieved proof-of-concept in animal trials clinical breakthrough is still awaiting success, the reasons of which are ongoing matter of debate. In recent times mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) came into focus as a transplantable cell source to treat ALF. Interestingly, as demonstrated in various rodent animal models their mode of action is rather based on trophic support of hepatocytes remaining in the damaged host parenchyma rather than substitution of tissue loss. Mechanistically, either direct or indirect paracrine effects from the transplanted cells acting pro-proliferative, anti-apoptotic, and anti-inflammatory seem to trigger the regenerative response of the residual healthy hepatocytes in the otherwise lethally injured liver parenchyma. Thus, allogeneic MSC may be the best choice for the treatment of ALF taking advantage of their short-term benefit to sustain the critical phase of the acute insult avoiding long-term immunosuppression.Entities:
Keywords: acute liver injury; cell transplantation; liver stem cells; stem cell-derived hepatocytes
Year: 2012 PMID: 22485094 PMCID: PMC3317270 DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2012.00078
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Physiol ISSN: 1664-042X Impact factor: 4.566
Figure 1Acetaminophen and hepatotoxicity. Acetaminophen (paracetamol) is detoxified in the liver by conjugation or cytochrome P450-dependent oxidation followed by conjugation to glutathione (GSH). Depletion of GSH leads to formation of reactive nitrogen and oxygen species, which in turn causes cell death. For further details see text.
Figure 2Pericentral necrosis after acetaminophen intoxication. Rats were treated with a repeated oral dose of 4 g/kg body weight of acetaminophen. Eighteen hours later livers were explanted and slices prepared for hemalaun–eosin staining. Dashed lines exemplify initial (area 1) and final necrotic perivenous areas (area 2, cv, central vein) of the liver tissue. Please note that areas around the portal vein (pv) are void of tissue damage.
Figure 3Balance of tissue homeostasis after acute liver injury. The regenerative response of the liver after acute intoxication is triggered by the emergence of initial tissue damage and progression. Dependding on the dose of the noxa and the regenerative capacity of the hepatocytes injury regression and regeneration or progression and ALF develop.
Figure 4Anti-apoptotic and pro-proliferative action of MSC after acetaminophen intoxication of the rat liver. Rats were treated with a repeated dose of 4 g/kg body weight of acetaminophen. Eighteen hours after the last dose the animals were sacrificed and the livers prepared for the detection of apoptotic cells (dark nuclei) by the TUNEL assay (lower panels) or proliferating cells (dark nuclei) by the Ki67 stain (upper panels). Where indicated animals received adipose tissue-derived rat MSC pre-differentiated into hepatocyte-like cells (rMSC-HC) 6 h after the last dose of acetaminophen. It is obvious that the number of apoptotic cells was significantly lower but of proliferating cells was higher in the livers with MSC (right panels) indicating the anti-apoptotic and pro-proliferative action of the MSC.
Summary of clinical trials involving mesenchymal stem cells of different tissue sources for the treatment of chronic liver diseases.
| Study Title | MSC source | Sponsor | Patients | Study phase | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Safety and efficacy of human mesenchymal stem cells for treatment of liver failure | Umbilical cord | Beijing 302 Hospital, China | 70 | Phase I/II | recruiting |
| Autologous mesenchymal stem cell transplantation in liver cirrhosis | No details | Gulhane Military Medical Academy, Turkey | 25 | No details | recruiting |
| Umbilical cord mesenchymal stem cells infusion via hepatic artery in cirrhosis patients | Umbilical cord | Qingdao University, China | 50 | Phase I/II | Not yet recruiting |
| Improvement of liver function in liver cirrhosis patients after autologous mesenchymal stem cell injection: a phase I–II clinical trial | No details | Shaheed Beheshti Medical University, Islamic Republic of Iran | 30 | Phase I/II | Completed |
| Allogeneic bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells transplantation in patients with liver failure caused by hepatitis B virus | Bone marrow | Sun Yat-sen University, China | 120 | Phase II | Active, not recruiting |
| Human umbilical cord mesenchymal stem cells transplantation for patients with decompensated liver cirrhosis | Umbilical cord | Shenzhen Beike Bio-Technology Co., Ltd., China | 20 | Phase I/II | Completed |
| Human menstrual blood-derived mesenchymal stem cells for patients with liver cirrhosis | Menstrual blood | S-Evans Biosciences Co., Ltd., China | 50 | Phase I/II | Recruiting |
| Umbilical cord mesenchymal stem cell transfusion in patients with severe liver cirrhosis | Umbilical cord | Chinese Academy of Sciences, China | 200 | Phase I/II | Recruiting |
| Mesenchymal stem cells after renal or liver transplantation | No details | University Hospital of Liege, Belgium | 40 | Phase I/II | Recruiting |
| Therapeutic effects of liver failure patients caused by chronic hepatitis B after autologous MSCs transplantation | Bone marrow | Sun Yat-sen University, China | 158 | No details | Completed |
| Umbilical cord mesenchymal stem cells for patients with liver cirrhosis | Umbilical cord | Beijing 302 Hospital, China | 45 | Phase I/II | Recruiting |
| Efficacy of | Bone marrow | Murat Kantarcioglu, Gulhane Military Medical Academy, Turkey | 10 | Phase II | Recruiting |
| Transplantation of autologous mesenchymal stem cell in decompensate cirrhotic patients with pioglitazone | Bone marrow | Royan Institute, Islamic Republic of Iran | 3 | Phase I | Recruiting |
| Efficacy and safety study of allogenic mesenchymal stem cells for patients with chronic graft versus host disease | No comment | Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, China | 100 | Phase II, phase III | Not yet recruiting |
| Efficacy and safety study of allogenic mesenchymal stem cells for patients with refractory primary biliary cirrhosis | Bone marrow | Robert Chunhua Zhao, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, China | 20 | Phase I | Not yet recruiting |
| Allogenic bone marrow stem cells transplantation in patients with liver cirrhosis | Bone marrow | Sun Yat-sen University, China | 60 | Phase II | Active, not recruiting |
| Allogenic bone marrow stem cell transplantation in liver failure | Bone marrow | Sun Yat-sen University, China | 60 | Phase II | Active, not recruiting |
Data are taken from reference (.