The Fgl2/fibroleukin prothrombinase contributes to immunologically mediated thrombosis in experimental and human viral hepatitis

Philip A. Marsden, Qin Ning(Tongji Hospital), L. S. Fung(University Health Network), Xioping Luo(Tongji Hospital), Yue Chen(Tongji Hospital), Michael Mendicino(University Health Network), Anand Ghanekar(University Health Network), Jeremy A. Scott(St. Michael's Hospital), Teresa Miller(University Health Network), Camie W. Chan(University Health Network), Mathew W.C. Chan(Canada Research Chairs), Wei He(University Health Network), Reginald M. Gorczynski(University Health Network), David Grant(University Health Network), David A. Clark(University Health Network), M. James Phillips(University Health Network), Gary Levy(University Health Network)
Journal of Clinical Investigation
July 1, 2003
Cited by 177

Abstract

Fibrin deposition and thrombosis within the microvasculature is now appreciated to play a pivotal role in the hepatocellular injury observed in experimental and human viral hepatitis. Importantly, the pathways by which fibrin generation is elicited in viral hepatitis may be mechanistically distinct from the classical pathways of coagulation induced by mechanical trauma or bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS). In the setting of murine hepatitis virus strain-3 (MHV-3) infection, a member of the Coronaviridae, activated endothelial cells and macrophages express distinct cell-surface procoagulants, including a novel prothrombinase, Fgl2/fibroleukin, which are important for both the initiation and localization of fibrin deposition. To assess the role of Fgl2/fibroleukin in murine viral hepatitis we generated a Fgl2/fibroleukin-deficient mouse. Peritoneal macrophages isolated from Fgl2/fibroleukin-/- mice did not generate a procoagulant response when infected with MHV-3. Fibrin deposition and liver necrosis were markedly reduced, and survival was increased in mice infected with MHV-3. To address the relevance of Fgl2/fibroleukin in human chronic viral hepatitis we studied patients with minimal and marked chronic hepatitis B. We detected robust expression of Fgl2/fibroleukin mRNA transcripts and protein in liver tissue isolated from patients with marked chronic hepatitis B. Fibrin deposition was strongly associated with Fgl2/fibroleukin expression. Collectively, these data indicate a critical role for Fgl2/fibroleukin in the pathophysiology of experimental and human viral hepatitis.


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