| Literature DB >> 32661265 |
Yu-Ting Hsu1,2, Ching-Ho Wu1,3, Chun-Yuan Chao1,2, Yu-Syuan Wei1,2, Yen-Chen Chang1,4, Yi-Ting Chen5,6, Shuei-Liong Lin5,6,7,8, Su-Yi Tsai9,8, Ya-Jane Lee1,3, Pei-Shiue Tsai10,11,12.
Abstract
Patients with kidney failure rely on life-saving peritoneal dialysis to facilitate waste exchange and maintain homeostasis of physical conditions. However, peritoneal dialysis often results in peritoneal fibrosis and organ adhesion that subsequently compromise the efficiency of peritoneal dialysis and normal functions of visceral organs. Despite rodent models provide clues on the pathogenesis of peritoneal fibrosis, no current large animal model which shares high degree of physiological and anatomical similarities to human is available, limiting their applications on the evaluation of pre-clinical therapeutic efficacy. Here we established for the first time, hypochlorite-induced porcine model of peritoneal fibrosis in 5-week-old piglets. We showed that administration 15-30 mM hypochlorite, a dose- and time-dependent severity of peritoneal fibrosis characterized by mesothelium fragmentation, αSMA+ myofibroblasts accumulation, organ surface thickening and type I collagen deposition were observed. We also demonstrated in vitro using human mesothelial cells that hypochlorite-induced fibrosis was likely due to necrosis, but not programmed apoptosis; besides, overexpression of IL1β, CX3CL1 and TGFβ on the peritoneal mesothelium in current model was detected, similar to observations from peritoneal dialysis-induced peritoneal fibrosis in human patients and earlier reported mouse model. Moreover, our novel antemortem evaluation using laparoscopy provided instant feedback on the progression of organ fibrosis/adhesion which allows immediate adjustments on treatment protocols and strategies in alive individuals that can not and never be performed in other animal models.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32661265 PMCID: PMC7359301 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-68495-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Ante-mortem laparoscopy and post-mortem necropsy evaluations of NaClO-induced peritoneal fibrosis. (A) Laparoscopy evaluation of abdominal cavity showed multi-point adhesions (indicated with arrows) between parietal peritoneum and fibrotic visceral organs. (B) Infiltration of spindle cells with increased thickness at the surface of the liver was observed in liver sample obtained from 0.1% NaClO-injured pigs. Parietal and visceral peritoneum biopsies obtained upon laparoscopic evaluation were processed for H&E stain. Accumulation and thickening of fibrous connective tissue with lymphocytes infiltration were observed in pigs injured with 0.1 NaClO, representative images from 0.1% NaClO-injured pig were illustrated. (C) Gross findings of abdominal organs in pigs treated with different concentrations of NaClO. Saline was used as vehicle control. Arrows indicated adhesions between visceral organs or between parietal peritoneum with organs. Fibrosis on the surface of the organs was also observed and marked with asterisks. (D) Quantitative pathological evaluations by modified adhesion scoring system showed the lesions in 0.1 or 0.2% NaClO-injured pigs were statistically more severe than saline- or 0.05% NaClO-injured pigs. N.S.: non-significant different. Asterisk indicates significant difference (p < 0.05) between groups. L liver; I intestine; GB gall bladder; S spleen; PP parietal peritoneum. Representative images from 5 individual pigs of each group were presented.
Gross pathological scoring system.
| Organ | Description | Score |
|---|---|---|
| Liver | Normal | 0 |
| Dull edge | 1 | |
| Surface turbid thickening | ||
| Local | 2 | |
| Diffuse | 3 | |
| Fusion of lobes | 4 | |
| Spleen | Normal | 0 |
| Irregular surface | 1 | |
| Surface turbid thickening | ||
| Local | 2 | |
| Diffuse | 3 | |
| Intestine | Normal | 0 |
| Surface turbid thickening | 1 | |
| Adhesion | ||
| Mild | 2 | |
| Severe (multiple loops) | 3 | |
| Adhesions of visceral organs | No adhesion | 0 |
| Peritoneum adhesion with liver | 2 | |
| Peritoneum adhesion with spleen | 2 | |
| Peritoneum adhesion with intestine | 2 | |
| Liver adhesion with spleen | 2 | |
| Liver adhesion with intestine | 2 | |
Figure 2Histological evaluations on the thickening of tissue surface and type I collagen accumulation in NaClO-injured pigs. (A) A single lining of surface mesothelial cells (indicated with green arrow heads) was observed above the submesothelial connective tissue layer in both parietal and visceral peritoneum of control pigs. However, a dose-dependent thickening of submesothelial compact zone was observed in NaClO-injured pigs. Distance between the surface mesothelial cell layer (green arrowheads) and submesothelial connective tissue layer (underneath the green dash line) was marked. A dose-dependent thickening of surface capsule was also detected in the liver and duodenum. (B) Immunohistochemistry showed a dose-dependent increased type I collagen deposition (marked with asterisks) on the parietal peritoneum and on the surface of visceral organs. (C) NaClO-induced organ surface thickening was quantified by CellSens Software and 0.1% NaClO induced the most server pathological changes among all concentration tested. (D) In the peritoneum overlying parietal peritoneum and duodenum, 0.1% NaClO resulted in the most severe type I collagen accumulation, and a dose-dependent accumulation of type I collagen was observed on the surface of liver. A–d indicate significant difference (p < 0.05) between groups. Representative images from five individual pigs of each group were presented.
Figure 3Indirect immunofluorescent evaluation of mesothelium integrity and accumulation of α smooth muscle actin positive (αSMA+) cells in NaClO-injured pigs. (A) Sodium hypochlorite-induced fragmentation of mesothelium of ventral parietal peritoneum (labeled with cytokeratin in green) and infiltration of αSMA+ cells (labeled in red) at the submesothelial region of ventral parietal peritoneum. Higher magnification showed continuation of CK+ mesothelial cells with minimal amount of αSMA+ cells in control pig, and discontinued mesothelium with αSMA+ cells in NaClO-injured groups. (B) Immunohistochemistry study demonstratedαSMA+ spindle cells infiltrated in the adhesion area between two visceral organs. (C) Quantification analyses showed a dose-dependent loss of CK+ mesothelium at the surface of parietal peritoneum and liver after NaClO injury. Accumulation of αSMA+ cells was more apparent in 0.1% when compared with control or other NaClO-injured pigs. I intestine, L liver. Representative images from 5 individual pigs of each group were presented. a–d indicate significant difference (p < 0.05) between groups.
Figure 4Flow cytometry and cytokine analyses on hypochlorite-induced cell fate. (A) Human mesothelial cells were treated with 0.02% NaClO for 6–72 h. Flow cytometry analyses for cellular apoptosis (using annexin V as marker) and necrosis (using PI as marker) showed NaClO mainly induced cell necrosis rather than a programmed cell death. (B) Quantitative analysis showed not statistical difference between control and NaClO-treated mesothelial cells; however, significant differences were measured on necrosis between two experimental conditions. (C) Cytokine analyses on serum samples obtained from 0.1% NaClO-injured pigs indicated significant elevation of pro-inflammatory cytokines IL-1β and TNF-α at 2–4 days post injury. Asterisks indicate significant differences between groups (*p < 0.05, **p < 0.01, N.S. not statistical different).
Figure 5Evaluation of cell surface expression of CX3CL1 expression in NaClO-injured pigs. A time-dependent increase on cell surface fractalkine CX3CL1 protein expression was detected on the mesothelium layer of parietal peritoneum, liver and duodenum. Enlarged image depicted specific CX3CL1 protein expression (in green) on the mesothelial cells (indicated by CK staining in red). Arrowheads indicated co-localization of two staining. For each experimental condition, 10 image frames from 3 different pigs were evaluated (30 images per experimental condition) and representative images were presented.
Figure 6Evaluation of TGF-β1 protein expression in the abdominal lavage and tissues. (A) Abdominal lavage was used to evaluate the fibrotic environment of abdominal cavity after NaClO injury. With ELISA, a significant increase in TGF-β1 was detected at day 4 and 7 after NaClO injury. (B) Paraffin-embedded tissue sections were used to examined surface and cellular expression of TGF-β1. In line with data from abdominal lavage and Western-blotting analysis, a significant increase in TGF-β1 on parietal peritoneum and duodenum, but not in liver was detected at tissue surface after NaClO injury, no changes on liver was likely due to strong signal present at the parenchyma. Enlarge images showed overexpression of TGF-β1 on the mesothelial cells (indicated with arrowheads). For each experimental condition, 10 image frames from 3 different pigs were evaluated (30 images per experimental condition) and representative images were presented. Asterisks indicate significant differences between groups (*p < 0.05, **p < 0.01, ***p < 0.001).