BMC Medical Genomics (Oct 2022)

Selective gene expression profiling contributes to a better understanding of the molecular pathways underlying the histological changes observed after RHMVL

  • Janine Arlt,
  • Sebastian Vlaic,
  • Ronny Feuer,
  • Maria Thomas,
  • Utz Settmacher,
  • Uta Dahmen,
  • Olaf Dirsch

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12920-022-01364-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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Abstract Background In previous studies, five vasoactive drugs were investigated for their effect on the recovery process after extended liver resection without observing relevant improvements. We hypothesized that an analysis of gene expression could help to identify potentially druggable pathways and could support the selection of promising drug candidates. Methods Liver samples obtained from rats after combined 70% partial hepatectomy and right median hepatic vein ligation (n = 6/group) sacrificed at 0 h, 24 h, 48 h, and 7days were selected for this study. Liver samples were collected from differentially perfused regions of the median lobe (obstruction-zone, border-zone, normal-zone). Gene expression profiling of marker genes regulating hepatic hemodynamics, vascular remodeling, and liver regeneration was performed with microfluidic chips. We used 3 technical replicates from each sample. Raw data were normalized using LEMming and differentially expressed genes were identified using LIMMA. Results The strongest differences were found in obstruction-zone at 24 h and 48 h postoperatively compared to all other groups. mRNA expression of marker genes from hepatic hemodynamics pathways (iNOS,Ptgs2,Edn1) was most upregulated. Conclusion These upregulated genes suggest a strong vasoconstrictive effect promoting arterial hypoperfusion in the obstruction-zone. Reducing iNOS expression using selective iNOS inhibitors seems to be a promising approach to promote vasodilation and liver regeneration.

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