Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10768690 | Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2005 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
The precise role of IL-6 in liver regeneration and hepatocyte proliferation is controversial and the role of SOCS3 in liver regeneration remains unknown. Here we show that in vitro treatment with IL-6 inhibited primary mouse hepatocyte proliferation. IL-6 induced p21cip1 protein expression in primary mouse hepatocytes. Disruption of the p21cip1 gene abolished the inhibitory effect of IL-6 on cell proliferation. Co-culture with nonparenchymal liver cells diminished IL-6 inhibition of hepatocyte proliferation, which was likely due to IL-6 stimulation of nonparenchymal cells to produce HGF. Finally, IL-6 induced higher levels of p21cip1 protein expression and a slightly stronger inhibition of cell proliferation in SOCS3+/â mouse hepatocytes compared to wild-type hepatocytes, while liver regeneration was enhanced and prolonged in SOCS3+/â mice. Our findings suggest that IL-6 directly inhibits hepatocyte proliferation via a p21cip1-dependent mechanism and indirectly enhances hepatocyte proliferation via stimulating nonparenchymal cells to produce HGF. SOCS3 negatively regulates liver regeneration.
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Authors
Rui Sun, Barbara Jaruga, Shailin Kulkarni, Haoyu Sun, Bin Gao,