Objective: To investigate the role of PERK/eIF2alpha signaling pathway in hepatocyte apoptosis of alcoholic liver injury rats.
Methods: Rat models with ethanol-induced liver injury were successfully developed by gastric gavage with ethanol-corn oil mixtures for 12 weeks. At different time points (4, 6, 10, 12 week), liver pathology was dynamically observed. The hepatocyte apoptosis was quantitatively analyzed by Annexin V-FITC/PI double-labeled flow cytometry, the serum total homocysteine (tHCY) level was detected by ELISA and the expressions of eIF2a, p-eIF2a, GRP78/Bip, GRP94, caspase-3 and caspase-12 in liver were examined using Real-time PCR and Western blot.
Results: Typical acute liver injury and chronic liver injury were observed at week 4 and week 12 respectively. The hepatocyte apoptosis rates in 6-week model rats significantly increased compared with normal rats (P value less than 0.05), and the degree of hepatocyte apoptosis continued to increase with the modeling time, and the percentages of early and total apoptosis reached 26% and 29% at week 12. From week 6 to week 12, the serum tHCY levels in model rats were obviously higher than in normal rats (P value less than 0.01). Since week 4, eIF2a protein phosphorylation in model rat livers remarkably elevated compared with that in normal rat livers (P value less than 0.01), and at week 12 the peIF2a protein expression in model rat livers increased by 2.81-fold. Since week 4 the expressions of GRP78/Bip, GRP94, caspase-12 and caspase-3 mRNA and protein in model rat livers showed a significant increase as compared to normal rat livers, and at week 12, these gene and protein levels increased 4.70, 12.95, 3.83, 4.05 fold and 3.93, 6.93, 9.88, 3.31 fold, respectively (P value less than 0.01).
Conclusion: Activation of PERK/eIF2a signaling pathway contributes to the occurrence and development of hepatocyte apoptosis in alcoholic liver injury rats and it might be as a potential target for therapeutic applications in alcoholic liver diseases.