Hepatocyte transplantation in a model of toxin-induced liver disease: variable therapeutic effect during replacement of damaged parenchyma by donor cells
Km. Braun et al., Hepatocyte transplantation in a model of toxin-induced liver disease: variable therapeutic effect during replacement of damaged parenchyma by donor cells, NAT MED, 6(3), 2000, pp. 320-326
Citations number
44
Categorie Soggetti
Research/Laboratory Medicine & Medical Tecnology","Medical Research General Topics
To provide long-term therapy in patients with severe toxin-induced hepatic
parenchymal damage, donor hepatocytes would need to replicate and replace a
large portion of the damaged parenchyma. Using a mouse model developed to
reproduce this type of hepatic injury, we found that hepatocyte transplanta
tion only slightly improved survival after transplantation despite the fact
that many non-survivors showed moderate liver repopulation by donor cells.
Perhaps accounting for this outcome, donor parenchyma in non-survivors did
not have typical lobular organization. These results indicate that the re-
creation of functional parenchyma by transplanted hepatocytes requires time
, during which donor cells proliferate and then establish normal parenchyma
l architecture.