Background: Apoptosis as well as necrosis may play an important role in hepatic ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury. Akt, a serine-threonine protein kinase, is known to promote cell survival. We investigated whether gene transfer of constitutively active or dominant negative Akt could affect hepatic I/R injury.
Materials and methods: Hepatic I/R injury was induced in rats by Pringle's maneuver for 20 min followed by reperfusion. Adenoviruses encoding a constitutively active form of Akt (myrAkt), a dominant negative form of Akt (dnAkt), or beta-galactosidase (LacZ) were injected through the tail vein 72 h before hepatic I/R.
Results: Terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUTP-biotin nick-end labeling (TUNEL) staining demonstrated a significant increase in the positive cells 240 min after reperfusion. Immunoblotting with phospho-Akt antibody showed phosphorylation of Akt from 90 to 180 min after reperfusion. The expression of myrAkt reduced the number of TUNEL-positive cells and hepatic necrosis around the central veins in the liver after reperfusion. This expression also significantly inhibited the increase in serum alanine aminotransferase (297 +/- 131 IU/L, P < 0.05) 120 min after I/R, compared with increases in uninfected (1761 +/- 671 IU/L), LacZ adenovirus (1528 +/- 671 IU/L)-, and dnAkt adenovirus (1342 +/- 485 IU/L)-infected rats. MyrAkt expression phosphorylated Bad and inhibited the release of cytochrome-c after reperfusion. No difference in nuclear translocation of nuclear factor (NF)-kappaB, p65 was seen among the three groups of rats, however.
Conclusion: Adenoviral gene transfer of myrAkt could inhibit apoptotic cell death and subsequent hepatic I/R injury in the rat, through Bad, not NF-kappaB.
Copyright 2004 Elsevier Inc.