Mitochondrial abnormalities in non-alcoholic steatohepatitis. |
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Authors: | S H Caldwell R H Swerdlow E M Khan J C Iezzoni E E Hespenheide J K Parks W D Parker |
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Institution: | Department of Internal Medicine, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, USA. |
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Abstract: | BACKGROUND/AIMS: We assessed mitochondrial morphology by electron microscopy and the prevalence of a mitochondrial gene deletion in patients with non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), alcohol-related liver disease and non-fatty liver diseases. Respiratory chain function using a cytoplasmic hybrid (cybrid) assay was further studied in NASH patients and healthy controls. METHODS: Electron microscopy was performed in 26 specimens. Fifteen patients were studied by polymerase chain reaction to detect a 520-bp deletion product of the mitochondrial genome (dmtDNA). Cybrids were created by fusion of platelets with anaerobic neuroblastoma cells in six NASH patients and 12 controls. RESULTS: Eight of ten NASH, one of seven alcoholics and two of nine other patients had linear crystalline inclusions in megamitochondria (p<0.05). Three of five patients with alcohol-related liver disease had dmtDNA compared to one of five NASH patients and one of five non-steatohepatitis controls. Cybrid respiratory chain function in platelets was not different from that of controls. CONCLUSIONS: Respiratory chain dysfunction, if present in NASH, is not expressed in platelet-derived mitochondria. In contrast to alcohol-related liver disease with active drinking, NASH patients do not commonly express the 5-kb mitochondrial DNA gene deletion in liver tissue. As previously described in early alcohol-related liver disease, crystalline inclusions of unknown composition are seen in hepatic mitochondria in NASH. Their presence suggests either an adaptive process or mitochondrial injury. |
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