| Literature DB >> 32952871 |
Raquel T Yokoda1, Eduardo A Rodriguez2.
Abstract
Cholestatic liver diseases (CLD) begin to develop after an impairment of bile flow start to affect the biliary tree. Cholangiocytes actively participate in the liver response to injury and repair and the intensity of this reaction is a determinant factor for the development of CLD. Progressive cholangiopathies may ultimately lead to end-stage liver disease requiring at the end orthotopic liver transplantation. This narrative review will discuss cholangiocyte biology and pathogenesis mechanisms involved in four intrahepatic CLD: Primary biliary cholangitis, primary sclerosing cholangitis, cystic fibrosis involving the liver, and polycystic liver disease. ©The Author(s) 2020. Published by Baishideng Publishing Group Inc. All rights reserved.Entities:
Keywords: Bile acid; Cholangitis; Cholestasis; Epigenomics; Immunogenetics; Pathogenesis
Year: 2020 PMID: 32952871 PMCID: PMC7475774 DOI: 10.4254/wjh.v12.i8.423
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Hepatol
Figure 1Core pathogenic mechanism of cholestatic liver diseases.
Figure 2Cholestatic liver disease clinical spectrum.
Figure 3Immunogenetics related to the core of cholestatic liver diseases. PSC: Primary sclerosing cholangitis.
Potential pathways as targets for existing antibodies
| Anti-CD40 (dacetuzumab/lucatumumab) | T-cell-B-cell interactions in primary biliary cholangitis | Multiple sclerosis (pre-clinical) | [ |
| Anti-CXCL10 (MDX-1100) | CXCR3-CXCL9/10/11 CXCR3 is upregulated on liver-infiltrating Th1 and Th17 in primary biliargy cholangitis | Rheumatoid arthritis | [ |
| Anti-CXCL13 (Mab 5261) | T- and B-cell migration to germinal centers in primary biliary cholangitis | Preclinical development | [ |
| Anti-CCR6 | Recruitment of Th17 cells around inflamed biliary epithelial cells in primary biliary cholangitis | Preclinical development | [ |
| Anti-GRP35 | Activation of GPR35 reduces IL-4 release from natural killer T cells in primary sclerosing cholangitis | Antibody recently developed | [ |
| Anti-PRKD2 | SIK2 pathway in PSC, AMPK-related kinase PRKD2 polymorphism are seen in early inflammatory bowel disease in primary sclerosing cholangitis | Preclinical development | [ |
PSC: Primary sclerosing cholangitis.
Preclinical research cholestatic liver diseases
| Mitochondrial damage by GCDCA | Mitofusin 2 protects hepatocyte mitochondrial function | [ | |
| Immunomodulation in primary biliary cholangitis with CTLA-4-Ig (immunoglobulin) as an immunotherapeutic agent | Signaling by CTLA-4 can modulate costimulation and induce inhibitory signals | [ | |
| Immunomodulation in primary biliary cholangitis with anti-CD40L | Reduced liver inflammation significantly initial lowering of anti-mitochondrial antibodies was observed but non-sustained. | [ | |
| Action of nuclear bile acid receptor FXR in cholestasis | Hepatoprotection from cholestasis by inducing FGF-15 | [ | |
| Immunomodulation Anti-CCR5/CCR2 in combination with all-trans-retinoic acid | Significant reduction in plasma liver enzymes, bilirubin, liver fibrosis, bile duct proliferation and hepatic infiltration of neutrophils and T cells and expression of cytokines | [ | |
| Curcumin acts through FXR signaling | Protection against alpha-naphthylisothiocyanate ANIT-induced cholestasis | [ | |
| Modulation of bile duct proliferation, with Melatonin | GnRH stimulated fibrosis gene expression in Hepatic stellate cells; melatonin may improve outcomes of cholestasis by suppressing GnRH. | [ | |
| Apamin, an apitoxin (bee venom) derivate prevented tetrachloride-induced liver fibrosis | Apamin suppressed the deposition of collagen, the proliferation of BECs and expression of fibrogenic genes | [ | |
| Toxic bile acids induce mitochondrial fragmentation. Preventing fragmentation improved outcome | Decreasing mitochondrial fission substantially diminished ROS levels, liver injury, and fibrosis under cholestatic conditions | [ | |
| Epigenetic approach Histone deacetylase 4 (HDAC4) restores prohibitin-1 (PHB1) | Genomic reprogramming, with regression of the fibrotic phenotype | [ | |
| Anti-γ-glutamyl transpeptidase antibody for osteodystrophy in cholestatic liver disease | GGT inhibited mineral nodule formation and expression of alkaline phosphatase and bone sialoprotein in osteoblastic cells. | [ | |
| EGFR signaling protects from cholestatic liver injury and fibrosis. | STAT3 is a negative regulator of bile acids synthesis and protects from bile acid-induced apoptosis. Additionally, it regulates EGFR expression | [ | |
| Necroptosis pathway in primary biliary cholangitis | Necroinflammatory pathways regulated by receptor-interacting protein 3 (RIP3), with deleterious progress in cholestatic diseases. RIP3 deficiency blocked bile-duct-ligation-induced (BDL) necroinflammation at 3 and 14 d post-BDL | [ | |
| Tauroursodeoxycholic acid modulates apoptosis in mice | Significant reduction of liver fibrosis, accompanied by a slight decrease of liver damage | [ |
Clinical trials and translational research
| IL12/IL23 Inflammatory pathway and loss of self-tolerance (Primary biliary cholangitis) | After 28 wk of treatment modest decreases in alkaline phosphatase | Phase 2, open-label proof of concept using Ustekimunab for ursodeoxycholic acid non-responsive patients | NCT01389973 | [ |
| Ileal bile acid transporter (IBAT) (Primary biliary cholangiti, Alagille syndrome, progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis) | Bile acid transporter inhibitor A4250 interrupts enterohepatic bile acid circulation at the terminal ileum | Phase 1 (40 individuals) completed Bile acids A4250 either as monotherapy or in combination with colonic release cholestyramine | NCT02963077 | [ |
| Modified bile acid and FXR agonist derived from chenodeoxycholic acid Obeticholic acid (OCA) (Primary biliary cholangitis) | Durable treatment response; the drug was approved by FDA in May 2017 for non-UDCA responders | Phase 4, double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled, multicenter (428 patients) estimated completion by 2025 (COBALT study) | NCT02308111 | [ |
| IBAT inhibition by GSK2330672 | After 14 d, GSK2330672 demonstrated to be safe, well tolerated and reduced pruritus severity | Phase 2 double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled | NCT01899703 | [ |
| Bile acids | Significantly reduced ALT and the bile acid intermediate C4 | Phase I: Combination of UDCA and ATRA | NCT01456468 | [ |
| Bile acids Obeticholic acid monotherapy (Primary biliary cholangitis) | With ursodiol or as monotherapy for 12 mo decreases from baseline in alkaline phosphatase and total bilirubin levels that differed significantly from the placebo. observed changes | Phase 3, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial and long-term safety extension of obeticholic acid (217 patients) (POISE study) | NCT01473524 | [ |
| Bezafibrate 400 mg alternative | PBC patients with inadequate response to ursodeoxycholic acid alone, treatment with bezafibrate in addition to ursodeoxycholic acid resulted in a rate of complete biochemical response that was significantly higher than the rate with placebo and ursodeoxycholic acid therapy | Phase 3 multi-center, randomized, placebo-controlled, parallel-group (100 patients) (BEZURSO study) | NCT01654731 | [ |
| Different doses of UDCA in primary sclerosing cholangitis | Significantly reduced ALP values dose-dependently | Phase 2 double-blind, randomized, multi-center, placebo-controlled (159 patients) (NUC3) | NCT01755507 | [ |
| Pentoxifylline as immunomodulator for primary biliary cholangitis | The study is small, and results were in clinicaltrials.gov, but due to study size no conclusion can be safely achieved | Phase 2, pilot study, open-label Pentoxifylline 400 mg TID for six months (20 participants) | NCT01249092 | Results at clinicaltrials.gov |
| Umbilical cord-derived mesenchymal cells (UC-MSC) | A significant decrease in alkaline phosphatase | Phase1/2 study, randomized, parallel group (100 participants) 12 wk of treatment | NCT01662973 | [ |
| Mitomycin C in primary sclerosing cholangitis | Final results awaited | Phase 2, double-blind, randomized, parallel group (130 participants) | NCT01688024 | |
| Curcumin in primary sclerosing cholangitis | Final results awaited | Phase1/2 open-label pilot study Evaluating the safety and efficacy of curcumin (15 participants) | NCT02978339 | |
| Human monoclonal antibody (BTT1023) that targets the vascular adhesion protein (VAP-1) in primary sclerosing cholangitis | Recruiting | Phase 2, a single arm, two-stage, multicenter, open-label (41 participants) | NCT02239211 | [ |
| Cenicriviroc a CCR2/CCR5 inhibitor proof of concept in primary sclerosing cholangitis | Results awaited | Phase 2, proof of concept, open-label (24 participants) (PERSEUS study) | NCT02653625 | |
| Bile acids Maralixibat Apical bile acids transporter inhibition (ASBTi) in primary sclerosing cholangitis | Although results are online, complete information is still awaited | Phase 2, pilot, open-label | NCT02061540 | Results available at clinicaltrial.gov |
| Immunomodulation Simtuzumab in primary sclerosing cholangitis Monoclonal antibody against lysyl oxidase-like 2 (LOXL2) | Results awaited | Phase 2b, dose-ranging, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled (235 participants) | NCT01672853 | |
| Bile acids Obethicolic acid in primary biliary cholangitis | Treatment with OCA 5-10 mg reduced serum ALP in patients with PSC. Mild to moderate dose-related pruritus was the most common adverse event | Phase 2, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial. Dose-Finding (AESOP) | NCT02177136 | [ |
PSC: Primary sclerosing cholangitis.