Journal article

Loss of Caspase-8 Protects Mice Against Inflammation-Related Hepatocarcinogenesis but Induces Non-Apoptotic Liver Injury


Authors listLiedtke, Christian; Bangen, Joerg-Martin; Freimuth, Julia; Beraza, Naiara; Lambertz, Daniela; Cubero, Francisco J.; Hatting, Maximilian; Karlmark, Karlin R.; Streetz, Konrad L.; Krombach, Gabriele A.; Tacke, Frank; Gassler, Nikolaus; Riethmacher, Dieter; Trautwein, Christian

Publication year2011

Pages2176-2187

JournalGastroenterology

Volume number141

Issue number6

ISSN0016-5085

Open access statusBronze

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1053/j.gastro.2011.08.037

PublisherElsevier


Abstract
BACKGROUND & AIMS: Disruption of the nuclear factor-kappa B (NF-kappa B) essential modulator (NEMO) in hepatocytes of mice (NEMO(Delta hepa) mice) results in spontaneous liver apoptosis and chronic liver disease involving inflammation, steatosis, fibrosis, and development of hepatocellular carcinoma. Activation of caspase-8 (Casp8) initiates death receptor-mediated apoptosis. We investigated the pathogenic role of this protease in NEMO(Delta hepa) mice or after induction of acute liver injury. METHODS: We created mice with conditional deletion of Casp8 in hepatocytes (Casp8(Delta hepa)) and Casp8(Delta hepa)NEMO(Delta hepa) double knockout mice. Acute liver injury was induced by Fas-activating antibodies, lipopolysaccharides, or concanavalin A. Spontaneous hepatocarcinogenesis was monitored by magnetic resonance imaging. RESULTS: Hepatocyte-specific deletion of Casp8 protected mice from induction of apoptosis and liver injury by Fas or lipopolysaccharides but increased necrotic damage and reduced survival times of mice given concanavalin A. Casp8(Delta hepa)NEMO(Delta hepa) mice were protected against steatosis and hepatocarcinogenesis but had a separate, spontaneous phenotype that included massive liver necrosis, cholestasis, and biliary lesions. The common mechanism by which inactivation of Casp8 induces liver necrosis in both injury models involves the formation of protein complexes that included the adaptor protein Fas-associated protein with death domain and the kinases receptor-interacting protein (RIP) 1 and RIP3-these have been shown to be required for programmed necrosis. We demonstrated that hepatic RIP1 was proteolytically cleaved by Casp8, whereas Casp8 inhibition resulted in accumulation of RIP complexes and subsequent liver necrosis. CONCLUSIONS: Inhibition of Casp8 protects mice from hepatocarcinogenesis following chronic liver injury mediated by apoptosis of hepatocytes but can activate RIP-mediated necrosis in an inflammatory environment.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleLiedtke, C., Bangen, J., Freimuth, J., Beraza, N., Lambertz, D., Cubero, F., et al. (2011) Loss of Caspase-8 Protects Mice Against Inflammation-Related Hepatocarcinogenesis but Induces Non-Apoptotic Liver Injury, Gastroenterology, 141(6), pp. 2176-2187. https://doi.org/10.1053/j.gastro.2011.08.037

APA Citation styleLiedtke, C., Bangen, J., Freimuth, J., Beraza, N., Lambertz, D., Cubero, F., Hatting, M., Karlmark, K., Streetz, K., Krombach, G., Tacke, F., Gassler, N., Riethmacher, D., & Trautwein, C. (2011). Loss of Caspase-8 Protects Mice Against Inflammation-Related Hepatocarcinogenesis but Induces Non-Apoptotic Liver Injury. Gastroenterology. 141(6), 2176-2187. https://doi.org/10.1053/j.gastro.2011.08.037



Keywords


FADDFas-associated Protein With Death DomainHEPATOCELLULAR-CARCINOMAINDUCED CELL-DEATHNECROSISNEMO/IKK-GAMMATNF Signalingtumor necrosis factor

Last updated on 2025-10-06 at 10:02