Defining the role of neutrophils in paracetamol-induced liver injury and regeneration
View/ Open
Cartwright2022.pdf (13.76Mb)
Date
19/01/2023Item status
Restricted AccessEmbargo end date
19/01/2025Author
Cartwright, Jennifer
Metadata
Abstract
Neutrophils, the most abundant white blood cell in mammals, are crucial innate immune
cells required as the first line of defence against invading pathogens or foreign material.
They are also recruited in response to sterile tissue injury and play significant roles in
coordinating both the innate and adaptive immune reactions. Their response and actions
during acetaminophen (APAP) induced acute liver injury (ALI) is controversial. APAP-ALI is the leading cause of liver injury-induced death in the western world and treatments
remain limited with >50% of patients not surviving after progressing to hepatic failure.
Most publications indicate neutrophils contribute to APAP-ALI progression, but recent
reports have highlighted their reparative function in this condition, through
communications with monocyte derived macrophages (MDM)s. Studies in other organs
and models of disease have also recently shown beneficial neutrophil functions, but the
controversy persists in APAP-ALI. Specifically, the neutrophil reparative mechanisms
require further investigation to enable exploitation to improve the outcome of patients
suffering APAP-ALI.
Here we show that neutrophils contribute both to hepatic damage and to tissue repair
during APAP-ALI. We show that this dichotomy of function is time dependent through a
combination of selective cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor (CDKI) mediated neutrophil
depletion in WT mice and through genetic KO of formylated peptide receptor 1 (FPR1)
mediated neutrophil activation. Preventing FPR1 mediated hepatic neutrophil migration
and activation, including myeloperoxidase activity resulted in reduced inflammation and
hepatic damage. This genetic manipulation also reduced hepatic repair with no
improvement of necrosis from 24 to 48 h post injury. Without FPR1 mediated neutrophil
activation there was reduced hepatic extracellular matrix remodelling and angiogenesis.
Early CDKI mediated neutrophil depletion reduced hepatic injury and late depletion
resulted in a proinflammatory monocyte macrophage phenotype, reduced hepatic repair
and hepatocyte proliferation. Identifying this time dependent divergent function of
neutrophils in APAP-ALI resolves some of the literature controversy and highlights the
importance of neutrophils in recovery from APAP-ALI. Although reducing neutrophil
number and activity can reduce injury, the overall and final effect may be detrimental to
tissue repair and therefore patient recovery.