Copyright
©The Author(s) 2023.
World J Hepatol. Jan 27, 2023; 15(1): 19-40
Published online Jan 27, 2023. doi: 10.4254/wjh.v15.i1.19
Published online Jan 27, 2023. doi: 10.4254/wjh.v15.i1.19
Disease | Mechanism | Model | Findings | Ref. |
ALF | N-acetyl-p-APAP | Mice model | The hazardous metabolite N-acetyl-p-benzoquinone depleted GSH and caused mitochondrial oxidative stress and necrosis | [6] |
Innate immunity, apoptosis, and cytokine release | Bio-samples from roughly 2000 patients with ALF | Generated pro-inflammatory mediators and oxidative stress, vasodilatation of the peripheral microcirculatory, hypoxia, lactic acidosis, and hypotension | [8] | |
MiR-122 and miR-192 | APAP in mice | Increased miR-122 and miR-192 levels after acute hepatic poisoning with acetaminophen in mice before transaminases | [82] | |
MiRNAs | ALF in mice | Up-regulated miR-155, miR-146a, miR-125a, miR-15b, and miR-16 | [83] | |
Down-regulated miR-1187 | ||||
Acute liver injury | MiRNAs | Acetaminophen or carbon tetrachloride in male rats | Down-regulated miR-29c_AS, miR298, miR327, miR342, miR370, miR376c, miR494, and miR503 | [66] |
Upregulated miR-153, miR-302b AS, miR-337, miR-363, miR-409-5p, and miR-542-3p | ||||
MiR-122 | I/R mouse model | Elevated miR-122 level | [67] | |
MiR-192 | APAP induced liver injury in mouse | Dose- and exposure-dependent elevation of miR-192 level | [79] | |
HBV | MiRNAs | Pooled sera obtained from HBV patients | Up-regulated miR-122 level. miR-122 could inhibit HBV replication in Huh7 and HepG2 cells | [84] |
MiR-155 | Human hepatoma cells | MiR-155 enhances innate antiviral immunity by promoting JAK/STAT signaling pathway by targeting SOCS1 | [86] | |
HCV | MiR-122 | Human hepatoma Huh-7.5 cells | MiR-122 is the predominant miRNA in the liver tissue. 2’-O-methyl antisense oligonucleotide depletion of miR-122 also inhibits HCV genotype 2a replication and infectious virus production | [89] |
MiRNAs | Human hepatoma cells | MiR-24, miR-149, miR-638, and miR-1181 were identified to be involved in HCV entry, replication, and propagation | [90] | |
Alcoholic steatohepatitis | MiRNAs | In vitro (RAW 264.7 macrophage) and in vivo (Kupffer cells of alcohol-fed mice) | Up-regulated miR-155 expression both in vitro and in vivo | [94] |
Increased TNF alpha production in response to miR-155 induction | ||||
Increased expression of miR-155 and miR-132 in the total liver | ||||
MiRNAs | Bile duct ligation rat model | Down-regulated miR-150 and miR-194 expression | [98] | |
MiRNAs | Human stellate cell line | Up-regulated miR-199 and miR-200 led to higher expression of fibrosis-related genes in an HSC cell line | [97] | |
NAFLD and alcoholic liver disease | Autophagy | In-vivo | Activation of macroautophagy and CMA eliminated damaged mitochondria, lessens oxidative stress, and promotes regeneration | [136] |
Liver cancer | Autophagy | Oncogene-driven cancer models | Protein kinase C promotes autophagy and oxidative phosphorylation | |
ROS generation, which through Nrf2 drives HCC through cell-autonomous and non-autonomous mechanisms | ||||
Liver cirrhosis | Hepatocyte | In-vivo | Activation of hepatic stellate cells by damaged hepatocytes | [18] |
Hepatic stellate cell | In-vivo | The activated hepatic stellate cells produce endothelin-1, TGF-β, and cytoglobin that share in the process of fibrogenesis | [24] | |
Sinusoidal endothelial cells SECs | Co-culture with freshly isolated SECs | Differentiated SECs prevent HSC activation and promote reversion of activated HSCs to quiescence through VEGF-stimulated NO production | [32] | |
Kupffer cells | Mouse model | Enhanced death ligand expression | [35] | |
Inhibition of hepatocyte apoptosis with a caspase inhibitor prevented Kupffer cell activation | ||||
Hepatic stellate cell activation |
Therapeutic intervention | Drugs | Main findings | Ref. |
Antioxidants | Silymarin | Possesses free radical scavenging activity and inhibits lipid peroxidation thus improving chronic liver diseases | [149] |
Selenium | Decrease DNA damage, hepatocyte necrosis, oxidative stress biomarkers, and liver toxicity | ||
Vitamin E | Reduces inflammation and protects from hepatocellular damage | [155,157,160] | |
N acetylcysteine | Increasing GSH peroxidase and decreasing oxidative stress in liver fibrosis | ||
MitoQ | Reduces lipid peroxidation and cultured hepatic stellate cell activation | [162] | |
Antifibrotic agents | Pirfenidone | Pirfenidone is effective at diminishing liver fibrosis as it suppresses TGF-β1 and NF-κB and decreases inflammatory cell infiltration and excess matrix deposition | [166-168] |
Statins, and anti- NADPH oxidases | PPAR-α modulators might decrease inflammation and fibrosis in cases of primary sclerosing cholangitis | ||
Immunosuppressants | Corticosteroids, and azathioprine | The first line of treatment for autoimmune hepatitis | [169] |
Anti-HSC therapy | Imatinib and sorafenib | Respectively act as PDGF and angiogenesis inhibitors thus they modulate fibrogenesis and fibrosis in autoimmune hepatitis | [173] |
Paclitaxel, ferulic acid and methyl ferulic acid | Can inhibit hepatic stellate cell activation through TGF-β/Smad pathway modulation | [175-177] | |
Curcumin | Can interrupt the PDGF-β/ERK pathway and inhibit hepatic stellate cell angiogenesis through activation of PPAR-γ. Curcumin can also activate autophagy and thus inhibit the TGF-β/Smad pathway thus reducing epithelial-mesenchymal transition | [178-180] | |
Gene therapy | HGF | Decreases the expression of TGF-β1, suppresses hepatocyte apoptosis, and improves fibrosis | [181] |
Matrix metalloproteinase-1 | Enhances the proliferation of hepatocytes and diminishes fibrosis | [183] | |
siRNA | By silencing CTGF, TGF-β, NF-κB target gene A, galectin-3, and αvβ3 integrin, siRNA effectively stops fibrogenesis by preventing HSCs activation and/or promoting their apoptosis | [184] | |
Cell therapy | MSCs | Inhibit hepatocyte degeneration, promote liver regeneration, and suppress fibrosis through differentiation into hepatocytes and production of various growth factors | [187] |
BMSCs | Decrease serum markers of liver injury and mRNA expression of TNF-α, IFN-γ, and FasL, and increase IL-10 mRNA expression in acute liver failure | [189] | |
Matrix metalloproteinase 2, tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase 1, and growth arrest-specific 6 | Promote hepatocytes regeneration, neovascularization, and extracellular matrix remodeling all contributing to liver regeneration | [191] | |
Gut liver axis | Baicalin | Modulates FXR and G-protein-coupled bile acid receptor TGR5 thus modulating the levels of TNF-α, NF-kβ, and TGF-β. It also inhibits inflammation, autophagy, and necrosis of parenchymal liver cells | [195-198] |
Probiotics | Modulate gut dysbiosis and bile acid dysregulation thus aiding in the treatment of NAFLD. Probiotics also modulate inflammation and fibrosis in NASH | [199-201] | |
Nanoparticle drug delivery | Gold | Enhances the antifibrotic activity of silymarin through increasing the expression of protective microRNAs and suppression of inflammatory mediators in the TGF-β1/smad pathway | [204] |
Phosphatidylserine-decorated nanoparticles | Enhances curcumin efficacy in fibrosis reduction | [205] | |
Liposome nanoparticles | Can be specifically delivered to integrins of activated hepatic stellate cells, in addition to facilitating gene therapy using siRNAs and mRNAs to modulate gene expression of hepatocytes | [208] | |
Autophagy inhibition | Becn1 knockdown | Autophagy suppression and inhibition of T lymphocyte infiltration, HSCs proliferation, as well as production of TNF-α, IFN-γ, and TGF-β1 | [209] |
Carvedilol | Increased p62 protein levels and inhibited autophagic flux by increasing lysosomal pH | [210] | |
Doxazosin | Inhibited HSC proliferation and migration, blocked autophagic flux and induced HSCs apoptosis | [211] | |
Resolvin D1 | Modulated AKT/mTOR signaling pathway resulting in the inhibition of autophagy and suppression of hepatic stellate cell activation | [212,213] |
- Citation: Ali FE, Abd El-Aziz MK, Sharab EI, Bakr AG. Therapeutic interventions of acute and chronic liver disorders: A comprehensive review. World J Hepatol 2023; 15(1): 19-40
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/1948-5182/full/v15/i1/19.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.4254/wjh.v15.i1.19