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Disulfide High‐Mobility Group Box 1 Drives Ischemia‐Reperfusion Injury in Human Liver Transplantation
- Sosa, Rebecca A;
- Terry, Allyson Q;
- Kaldas, Fady M;
- Jin, Yi‐Ping;
- Rossetti, Maura;
- Ito, Takahiro;
- Li, Fang;
- Ahn, Richard S;
- Naini, Bita V;
- Groysberg, Victoria M;
- Zheng, Ying;
- Aziz, Antony;
- Nevarez‐Mejia, Jessica;
- Zarrinpar, Ali;
- Busuttil, Ronald W;
- Gjertson, David W;
- Kupiec‐Weglinski, Jerzy W;
- Reed, Elaine F
- et al.
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.1002/hep.31324Abstract
Background and aims
Sterile inflammation is a major clinical concern during ischemia-reperfusion injury (IRI) triggered by traumatic events, including stroke, myocardial infarction, and solid organ transplantation. Despite high-mobility group box 1 (HMGB1) clearly being involved in sterile inflammation, its role is controversial because of a paucity of patient-focused research.Approach and results
Here, we examined the role of HMGB1 oxidation states in human IRI following liver transplantation. Portal blood immediately following allograft reperfusion (liver flush; LF) had increased total HMGB1, but only LF from patients with histopathological IRI had increased disulfide-HMGB1 and induced Toll-like receptor 4-dependent tumor necrosis factor alpha production by macrophages. Disulfide HMGB1 levels increased concomitantly with IRI severity. IRI+ prereperfusion biopsies contained macrophages with hyperacetylated, lysosomal disulfide-HMGB1 that increased postreperfusion at sites of injury, paralleling increased histone acetyltransferase general transcription factor IIIC subunit 4 and decreased histone deacetylase 5 expression. Purified disulfide-HMGB1 or IRI+ blood stimulated further production of disulfide-HMGB1 and increased proinflammatory molecule and cytokine expression in macrophages through a positive feedback loop.Conclusions
These data identify disulfide-HMGB1 as a mechanistic biomarker of, and therapeutic target for, minimizing sterile inflammation during human liver IRI.Many UC-authored scholarly publications are freely available on this site because of the UC's open access policies. Let us know how this access is important for you.
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