Background & Aims: The complement pathway is an important component of the innate and adaptive immune response. Here we tested the hypothesis that activation of complement is required for development of ethanol-induced fatty liver. Methods: Wild-type mice and mice lacking the third (C3) or fifth (C5) components of the complement activation pathway, as well as mice lacking decay-accelerating factor (CD55/DAF), a complement regulatory protein, were fed Lieber-DeCarli ethanol-containing diets for 6 weeks or pair-fed control diets. Results: Ethanol feeding to wild-type mice increased C3a in plasma. Wild-type and C5(-/-) mice fed the ethanol diet developed hepatic steatosis characterized by microvesicular and macrovesicular lipid accumulation and increased triglyceride content. C3(-/-) mice did not develop steatosis, while CD55/DAF(-/-) mice accumulated even more hepatic triglyceride after ethanol feeding than wild-type mice. Levels of serum alanine aminotransferase and hepatic tumor necrosis factor a, indicators of hepatocyte injury and inflammation, respectively, were increased in wild-type and CD55/DAF(-/-) mice but not in C5(-/-) mice after ethanol feeding. In contrast to the protective effect of C3(-/-) against ethanol-induced steatosis, levels of both alanine aminotransferase and tumor necrosis factor a were increased in C3(-/-) mice after ethanol feeding Conclusions: Here we have identified several elements of the complement system as important contributors to ethanol-induced fatty liver. C3 contributed primarily to the accumulation of triglyceride in the liver, whereas C5 was involved in inflammation and injury to hepatocytes. Further, the absence of CD55/DAF exacerbated these responses, suggesting that CD55/DAF serves as a barrier to ethanol-induced fatty liver.
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页码:1117 / 1126
页数:10
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