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Blockade of the L-arginine/NO synthase pathway worsens hepatic apoptosis and liver transplant preservation injury
Authors:Yagnik Gautam P  Takahashi Yoshihito  Tsoulfas George  Reid Kaye  Murase Noriko  Geller David A
Affiliation:Thomas E. Starzl Transplantation Institute, Department of Surgery, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15213, USA.
Abstract:Organ graft preservation injury is a major problem complicating liver transplantation. The L-arginine/nitric oxide pathway has protective effects in several models of liver injury. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the role of the L-arginine/NO synthase (NOS) pathway on liver preservation injury and to characterize endogenous inducible NOS (iNOS) expression. Orthotopic liver transplantation was performed with 18-hour University of Wisconsin preservation solution in syngeneic rats. Recipient rats were either untreated or treated with L-arginine, D-arginine, nonspecific NOS inhibitor N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME), or iNOS selective inhibitor L-N(6)-(1-imino-ethyl)lysine (L-NIL) after revascularization. As early as 1 hour following reperfusion, circulating arginine levels decreased 10-fold and ornithine levels increased 4-fold. A corresponding increase in arginase I protein was detected in serum. To address the profound arginine deficiency, we supplemented recipients with arginine after transplantation. L-arginine (but not D-arginine) supplementation significantly reduced preservation injury 12 hours after reperfusion, suggesting that the protective effect of L-arginine was mediated through the generation of NO. iNOS protein expression peaked in the liver 6 to 12 hours following reperfusion. Blockade of the L-arginine/NO pathway with L-NAME significantly increased necrotic and apoptotic cell death in the transplanted graft. Addition of the iNOS selective inhibitor L-NIL mildly increased liver transaminase levels and also increased apoptosis in the liver graft. In conclusion, transplant recipients are profoundly arginine deficient postreperfusion due to arginase release. L-Arginine supplementation and NO synthesis decrease necrotic and apoptotic cell death and ameliorate liver transplant preservation injury.
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