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Merck

The receptor tyrosine kinase EphB2 promotes hepatic fibrosis in mice.

Hepatology (Baltimore, Md.) (2015-03-19)
Patrice N Mimche, Lauren M Brady, Christian F Bray, Choon M Lee, Manoj Thapa, Thayer P King, Kendra Quicke, Courtney D McDermott, Sylvie M Mimche, Arash Grakoui, Edward T Morgan, Tracey J Lamb
ABSTRACT

Beyond the well-defined role of the Eph (erythropoietin-producing hepatocellular) receptor tyrosine kinases in developmental processes, cell motility, cell trafficking/adhesion, and cancer, nothing is known about their involvement in liver pathologies. During blood-stage rodent malaria infection we have found that EphB2 transcripts and proteins were up-regulated in the liver, a result likely driven by elevated surface expression on immune cells including macrophages. This was significant for malaria pathogenesis because EphB2(-/-) mice were protected from malaria-induced liver fibrosis despite having a similar liver parasite burden compared with littermate control mice. This protection was correlated with a defect in the inflammatory potential of hepatocytes from EphB2(-/-) mice resulting in a reduction in adhesion molecules, chemokine/chemokine receptor RNA levels, and infiltration of leukocytes including macrophages/Kupffer cells, which mediate liver fibrosis during rodent malaria infections. These observations are recapitulated in the well-established carbon tetrachloride model of liver fibrosis in which EphB2(-/-) carbon tetrachloride-treated mice showed a significant reduction of liver fibrosis compared to carbon tetrachloride-treated littermate mice. Depletion of macrophages by clodronate-liposomes abrogates liver EphB2 messenger RNA and protein up-regulation and fibrosis in malaria-infected mice. During rodent malaria, EphB2 expression promotes malaria-associated liver fibrosis; to our knowledge, our data are the first to implicate the EphB family of receptor tyrosine kinases in liver fibrosis or in the pathogenesis of malaria infection.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Supelco
DL-Dithiothreitol solution, 1 M in H2O
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Carbon tetrachloride, anhydrous, ≥99.5%
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L-Glutamine