By comparing the hepatic responses to tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha that occur during situations that promote liver injury (such. as obesity or chronic exposure to ethanol) with those that occur after stimuli (such as partial hepatectomy) that lead to liver regeneration, it is apparent that hepatocytes are usually able to constrain noxious responses to TNF-alpha, such as the release of reactive oxygen from mitochondria. It appears that: by promptly upregulating survival genes that regulate mitochondrial membrane permeability, hepatocytes are usually able to constrain noxious responses. including the release of mitochondrial-generated reactive oxygen species, that follow exposure to potentially toxic cytokines, such as TNF-alpha. Indeed, transient TNF-alpha-mediated increases in ROS may even be exploited by hepatocytes to evolve a subsequent proliferative response. Thus, the healthy liver has well-developed defense mechanisms that permit hepatocytes to adapt to cytokine-initiated stress, protecting them from cytokine-mediated lethality. Nevertheless, these same cytokines may cause liver injury when hepatocytes have been pre-exposed to toxins (e.g. ethanol) that interfere with their usual protective responses. Furthermore, while transient adaptations to cytokine-initiated stress permit hepatocytes to survive and proliferate, persistence of these anti-apoptotic, adaptative responses las occurs, for example, in fatty livers) may inadvertently enhance hepatocyte vulnerability to necrosis when the liver is confronted by secondary insults that promote mitochondrial membrane depolarization.