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Tissue influx of neutrophils and monocytes is delayed during development of trovafloxacin-induced tumor necrosis factor-dependent liver injury in mice

Authors :
Giustarini, Giulio
Kruijssen, Laura
van Roest, Manon
Bleumink, Rob
Weaver, Richard J
Bol-Schoenmakers, Marianne
Smit, Joost
Pieters, Raymond
dIRAS RA-1
Sub Center for Cell Imaging
One Health Toxicologie
Sub IRAS Tox ITX (immunotoxicologie)
Sub Immunopharmacology
Source :
Journal of applied toxicology, 38(5), 753
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Idiosyncratic drug-induced liver injury (iDILI) has a poorly understood pathogenesis. However, iDILI is often associated with inflammatory stress signals in human patients as well as animal models. Tumor necrosis factor (TNF) and neutrophils play a key role in onset of trovafloxacin (TVX)-induced iDILI, but the exact role of neutrophils and other leukocytes remains to be defined. We therefore set out to study the kinetics of immunological changes during the development of TVX-induced iDILI in the established murine model of acute liver injury induced by administration of TVX and TNF. Initially, TNF stimulated the appearance of leukocytes, in particular neutrophils, into the liver of TVX-treated mice, but even more so in control mice treated with the non-DILI inducing analogue levofloxacin (LVX) or saline as vehicle (Veh). This difference was apparent at 2 hours after TNF administration, but at 4 hours, the relative neutrophil amounts were reduced again in Veh- and LVX-treated mice whereas the amounts in TVX-treated mice remained at the same increased level as at 2 hours. The influx of monocytes/macrophages, which was unaffected in Veh- and LVX-treated mice was markedly reduced or even absent in TVX-treated mice. Unlike controls, mice receiving TVX + TNF display severe hepatotoxicity with clear pathology and apoptosis, coagulated hepatic vessels and increased alanine aminotransferase levels and interleukin 6/10 ratios. Findings indicate that TVX delays the acute influx of neutrophils and monocytes/macrophages. Considering their known anti-inflammatory functions, the disruption of influx of these innate immune cells may hamper the resolution of initial cytotoxic effects of TVX and thus contribute to liver injury development.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of applied toxicology, 38(5), 753
Accession number :
edsair.narcis........e60b0cd03cd339e2241cbb27c905a7d4