Background: Primary hyperoxaluria type-1 (PH1) is an autosomal recessive disease characterized by excessive oxalate production by hepatocytes caused by the deficiency of peroxisomal alanine-glyoxylate aminotransferase (AGT) activity. Persistent hyperoxaluria causes nephrocalcinosis and urolithiasis, leading to renal failure, followed by tissue oxalosis with life-threatening complications. Combined liver-kidney transplantation is the only definitive treatment of PH1. Hepatocyte transplantation, which is much less invasive, could have offered an attractive alternative. However, because the AGT-deficient hepatocytes overproduce oxalate, a large fraction of the mutant host hepatocytes must be replaced by AGT-competent cells, which is beyond the capacity of current hepatocyte transplantation procedures. Here, we have evaluated a preparative irradiation-based method of liver repopulation in an Agxt-deleted mouse model of PH1 (Agxt-/-).
Materials and methods: Hepatocytes (10(6) viable cells) isolated from congeneic mice ([ROSA]26 C57BL/6J) expressing Escherichia coli beta-galactosidase were transplanted into Agxt-/- mice by intrasplenic injection. The preparative regimen consisted of X-irradiation of the host liver and mitotic stimulation of the hepatocytes by adenovector-based expression of hepatocyte growth factor.
Results: The procedure resulted in progressive replacement of the mutant host hepatocytes with the AGT-competent hepatocytes, leading to correction of urinary oxalate excretion. Oral ethylene glycol challenge (0.7% for 1 week) resulted in nephrocalcinosis and microlithiasis in untreated Agxt-/- mice, but not in the mice after hepatic repopulation.
Conclusion: The results indicate that hepatocyte transplantation after appropriate preparative regimens may permit sufficient repopulation of the liver to ameliorate hyperoxaluria, and therefore should be evaluated further as a potential treatment of PH1.