Frigid Zone Medicine (Sep 2021)

Ablation of apoptosis-stimulating of p53 protein 1 protects mice from acute hepatic injury and dysfunction via NF-κB pathway in CCl4-induced hepatotoxicity

  • Daba Tolessa Muleta,
  • Huang Xiang,
  • Yagudin Timur,
  • Yang Ying,
  • Wang Jiangang,
  • Fu Xiaoyu,
  • Zhao Yue,
  • Gao Haiyu,
  • Zhou Yang,
  • Pan Zhenwei,
  • Zhong Xiangyu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2478/fzm-2021-0007
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1, no. 1
pp. 53 – 64

Abstract

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Acute liver injury (ALI) is characterized by apoptosis, inflammation, and oxidative stress, and pathogenic mechanism of ALI is poorly understood. Apoptosis-stimulating of p53 protein 1 (ASPP1) is involved in environmental responses, tumor growth, and NF-KB activity, which is of critical importance to ALI. However, the role of ASPP1 in ALI remains largely unexplored. The current study aimed to determine the role of ASPP1 in ALI induced by CCl4 and the underlying mechanism. ASPP1 expression was detected in wild type (WT) mice with ALI induced by CCl4. The function of ASPP1 in ALI induced by CCl4 was investigated using conventional knockout ASPP1 mice. ASPP1 expression significantly increased in ALI mice at 24 hours after CCl4 injection. Deletion of ASSP1 ameliorated apoptosis, inflammation, and necrosis in ALI relative to WT mice. In addition, deficiency of ASPP1 improved liver flood flow as well as ALT and AST levels. The levels of phosphorylated p65 and phosphorylated IκBα were lower in ASPP1-/- mice than in WT mice with ALI. These results implicate that deletion of ASPP1 may act via inhibition of the NF-κB pathway and protect mice from ALI, which may be a new potential therapeutic target for the treatment of ALI.

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