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1 Second Department of Medicine, Asahikawa Medical College, Asahikawa 078-8510; and 2 Department of Gastroenterology, Dokkyo University School of Medicine, Mibu, Tochigi 321-0293, Japan
Central neuropeptides play important roles
in many physiological and pathophysiological regulation mediated
through the autonomic nervous system. In regard to the hepatobiliary
system, several neuropeptides act in the brain to regulate bile
secretion, hepatic blood flow, and hepatic proliferation. Central
injection of corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) aggravates carbon
tetrachloride (CCl4)-induced acute liver injury through the sympathetic
nervous pathway in rats. However, still nothing is known about a role
of endogenous neuropeptides in the brain in hepatic pathophysiological
regulations. Involvement of endogenous CRF in the brain in CCl4-induced
acute liver injury was investigated by centrally injecting a CRF
receptor antagonist in rats. Male fasted Wistar rats were injected with
CRF receptor antagonist
-helical CRF-(9-41)
(0.125-5 µg) intracisternally just before and 6 h after
CCl4 (2 ml/kg) administration, and blood samples were obtained before
and 24 h after CCl4 injection for measurement of hepatic enzymes.
The liver sample was removed 24 h after CCl4 injection, and
histological changes were examined. Intracisternal
-helical
CRF-(9-41) dose dependently (0.25-2 µg) reduced the elevation of alanine aminotransferase and aspartate aminotransferase levels induced by CCl4. Intracisternal
-helical CRF-(9-41) reduced CCl4-induced liver histological
changes, such as centrilobular necrosis. The effect of central CRF
receptor antagonist on CCl4-induced liver injury was abolished by
sympathectomy and 6-hydroxydopamine pretreatment but not by hepatic
branch vagotomy or atropine pretreatment. These findings suggest the
regulatory role of endogenous CRF in the brain in experimental liver
injury in rats.
corticotropin-releasing hormone; hepatic sympathectomy; central nervous system; liver damage
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