| Literature DB >> 34966588 |
Joshua Hefler1, Braulio A Marfil-Garza1,2,3, Rena L Pawlick1, Darren H Freed4, Constantine J Karvellas5,6, David L Bigam1, A M James Shapiro1,7.
Abstract
Acute liver failure is marked by the rapid deterioration of liver function in a previously well patient over period of days to weeks. Though relatively rare, it is associated with high morbidity and mortality. This makes it a challenging disease to study clinically, necessitating reliance on preclinical models as means to explore pathophysiology and novel therapies. Preclinical models of acute liver failure are artificial by nature, and generally fall into one of three categories: surgical, pharmacologic or immunogenic. This article reviews preclinical models of acute liver failure and considers their relevance in modeling clinical disease.Entities:
Keywords: Acute liver failure; Preclinical models; Surgical models; Toxicity models
Year: 2021 PMID: 34966588 PMCID: PMC8667744 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.12579
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Commonly used preclinical models of acute liver failure.
| Features | Advantages | Disadvantages | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Surgical | Anhepatic |
Complete removal of liver Single or multi-stage procedure |
Highly reproducible Useful for testing liver support devices |
Irreversible Lacks inflammatory response Technically challenging in small animals |
| Partial hepatectomy |
Resection of 70–97% of liver mass |
Direct clinical correlate Useful for studies of hepatic regeneration |
Does not typically produce HE Specific to post-hepatectomy liver failure | |
| Hepatic artery ligation & portocaval anastomosis |
One- or two-stage procedure |
Reliably produces progressive HE & coma |
Irreversible No direct clinical correlate | |
| Pharmacological | Acetaminophen |
Injury result of toxic metabolite ( |
Direct clinical correlate Dose dependent effect |
May require cytochrome P450 induction or glutathione depletion Ineffective in rats Complicated by methemoglobinemia in large animal models |
| D-galactosamine |
Depletes uridine, interfering with RNA synthesis Given with or without lipopolysaccharide |
Demonstrated efficacy in variety of small & large animal models |
No direct clinical correlate Different histological pattern of injury from most hepatotoxins | |
| Carbon tetrachloride |
Produces highly reactive carbon-chloride radicals Also used in chronic liver injury models |
Representative of generalized hepatotoxic injury |
Specific chemical not encountered clinically Poor model for HE Between species variability | |
| Immunogenic | Concanavalin A |
Immunogenic lectin derived from jack bean |
Representative of T cell mediated hepatitis, relevant to autoimmune hepatitis clinically |
Batch-to-batch variability Species & strain differences in susceptibility |
| Fas antibody |
Binds & activates Fas cell death receptor |
Specifically induces cell death by apoptosis, an important mechanism in a variety of causes of ALF |
Also affects extra-hepatic tissues ( Limited experience outside of murine models Strain specific differences in mice | |
| Viral |
Includes endemic, species-specific viruses & genetically modified viruses &/or viruses applied to genetically modified hosts |
Important cause of ALF clinically Use of endemic murine or leporine viruses limits risk of transmission to research personnel |
Difficult to reliably induce ALF using human viruses | |
| Other | Long-Evans cinnamon rat |
Defect in gene encoding copper-transporting P-type ATPase, homologous to defect seen in Wilson’s disease |
Closely representative of Wilson’s disease ALF occurs spontaneously |
Not relevant to other causes of ALF |
Note:
ALF, acute liver failure; HE, hepatic encephalopathy; NAPQI, N-acetyl-p-benzoquinone imine; RNA, ribonucleic acid.
Pharmacological models of acute liver failure.
| Structure | Mechanism | Route of administration | Animal models | Dosage | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
| Alternative metabolism by cytochrome P450 leads to production of toxic metabolite NAPQI | PO, SC, IP, IV | Mouse, rat | 200–900 mg/kg (mouse) |
|
|
| Depletion of intracellular uridine stores necessary for RNA synthesis | IP, IV | Mouse, rat, rabbit, dog, pig, primate | 400–1,000 mg/kg or 300–700 mg/kg with 0.1 mg/kg LPS |
|
|
| Cytochrome P450 metabolism produces highly reactive trichloromethyl & trichloromethylperoxy radicals | PO, IP, IV | Mouse, rat, rabbit, pig | 0.5–2.5 mL/kg |
|
|
| Metabolism by cytochrome P450 or FAD-containing monooxygenase into hepatotoxins TASO & TASO2, which forms acetylimidolysine causing their denaturation | IP | Mouse, rat | 200–1,600 mg/kg (bolus) or 200–600 mg/kg daily x2-4d |
|
|
| Causes DNA alkylation leading to tumour formation in models of colorectal cancer, but mechanism not well characterized in hepatotoxic models | IP | Mouse | 50 or 100 mg/kg |
|
|
| Inhibitor of RNA polymerase II, disproportionately affecting cells with high metabolism | IP | Mouse, pig, primate | 0.6 mg/kg or 0.1 mg/kg with 0.1 µg/kg LPS |
|
|
| Cholestatic injury caused by accumulation in cholangiocytes leads to impaired bile flow & eventually hepatocyte necrosis | PO | Mouse, rat | 25–100 mg/kg |
Notes:
PO: per os, IP: intraperitoneally, SC: subcutaneously, IV: intravenously, LPS: lipopolysaccharide.
Relatively resistant, effective only at high doses.
Repeated or continuous administration often required for large animal models.
Can be administered PO, but not typically done with acute models.
Figure 1Differences between clinical and preclinical models of acute liver failure.
Figure 2Lobes resected in different murine models of post-hepatectomy liver failure.
Figure 3Portocaval anastomosis and hepatic artery ligation as a model of acute liver failure.