Acute atorvastatin is hepatoprotective against ischaemia-reperfusion injury in mice by modulating eNOS and microparticle formation

Hussam Ajamieh, Geoffrey C. Farrell, Robert S. Mccuskey, Jun Yu, Eagle Chu, Heng Jian Wong, Wesley Lam, Narci C. Teoh*

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    22 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Background & Aims: Steatosis accentuates the severity of hepatic ischaemia-reperfusion injury (IRI); 'statins' (HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors) protect the heart and brain against post-ischaemic injury. We tested whether short-term administration of atorvastatin protects fatty livers in obese mice against IRI. Methods: Mice with dietary or genetic simple steatosis (SS) or non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) were subjected to 60 min partial hepatic ischaemia/24 h reperfusion. Atorvastatin was injected intravenously (5 mg/kg) 1 h before IRI. Liver injury, Toll-like receptor-4 (TLR4), cytokines/chemokines, iNOS/eNOS expression, eNOS activity and thromboxane B2 (TXB2) production were determined. Results: Ischaemia-reperfusion injury was exaggerated by two- to five-fold in SS and NASH compared with lean liver. Atorvastatin pretreatment conferred 70-90% hepatic protection in all animals. Atorvastatin increased post-ischaemic eNOS mRNA/protein and strikingly enhanced eNOS activity (by phospho-eNOS). It also attenuated microparticle (MP) production, NF-κB activation, significantly dampened post-ischaemic thromboxane B2 production, induction of TNF-α, IL-6, MIP-1a, MCP-1, GM-CSF and vascular cell adhesion molecule-1 (VCAM), with a resultant reduction on macrophage and polymorphonuclear neutrophil recruitment. Up-regulation of HMGB1 and TLR4 after IRI was marked in fatty livers; 1 h pretreatment with atorvastatin reduced HMGB1 and TLR4 expression in all livers. Conclusions: Acute (1 h) atorvastatin administration is highly hepatoprotective against IRI in NASH, fatty and lean livers. Key mechanisms include suppression of inflammation by prevention of NF-κB activation, microvascular protection via eNOS activation and suppression of TXB2 and MP release. Short-term intravenous statin treatment is a readily available and effective preventive agent against hepatic IRI, irrespective of obesity and fatty liver disease, and merits clinical trials in at-risk patients.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)2174-2186
    Number of pages13
    JournalLiver International
    Volume35
    Issue number9
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 1 Sept 2015

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