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Viral Hepatitis: PDF Only

Derivation of hepatocytes from bone marrow cells in mice after radiation-induced myeloablation

Theise, Neil D. M.D.*,1; Badve, Sunil2; Saxena, Romil2; Henegariu, Octavian3; Sell, Stewart4; Crawford, James M.2; Krause, Diane S.5

Author Information

1Department of Pathology, New York University, School of Medicine, New York, NY

2Departments of Pathology, Albany Medical College, Albany, NY

3Medicine Albany Medical College, Albany, NY

4Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Albany Medical College, Albany, NY

5Laboratory Medicine, Yale University, School of Medicine, New Haven, CT

E-mail:[email protected]

*Address reprint requests to: New York University School of Medicine, Room 461, Department of Pathology, 560 First Avenue, New York, NY 10016. fax: 212-263-7916.

Received October 01, 1999; Accepted November 08, 1999; previously published online December 30, 2003

Hepatology31(1):p 235-240, January 2000. |DOI:10.1002/hep.510310135

Abstract

 

Following a report of skeletal muscle regeneration from bone marrow cells, we investigated whether hepatocytes could also derivein vivofrom bone marrow cells. A cohort of lethally irradiated B6D2F1 female mice received whole bone marrow transplants from age-matched male donors and were sacrificed at days 1, 3, 5, and 7 and months 2, 4, and 6 posttransplantation (n = 3 for each time point). Additionally, 2 archival female mice of the same strain who had previously been recipients of 200 male fluorescence-activated cell sorter (FACS)-sorted CD34+lin cells were sacrificed 8 months posttransplantation under the same protocol. Fluorescencein situ hybridization (FISH) for the Y-chromosome was performed on liver tissue. Y-positive hepatocytes, up to 2.2% of total hepatocytes, were identified in 1 animal at 7 days posttransplantation and in all animals sacrificed 2 months or longer posttransplantation. Simultaneous FISH for the Y-chromosome and albumin messenger RNA (mRNA) confirmed male-derived cells were mature hepatocytes. These animals had received lethal doses of irradiation at the time of bone marrow transplantation, but this induced no overt, histologically demonstrable, acute hepatic injury, including inflammation, necrosis, oval cell proliferation, or scarring. We conclude that hepatocytes can derive from bone marrow cells after irradiation in the absence of severe acute injury. Also, the small subpopulation of CD34+lin bone marrow cells is capable of such hepatic engraftment.

Copyright © 2000 American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.

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