Scanning and transmission electron microscopy of the cells forming the hepatic sinusoidal wall of rat in acetaminophen- and Escherichia coliendotoxin-induced hepatotoxicity

Autor: Nafady, Allam Mohamed, Ahmed, Omar Bauomy, Ghafeer, Hemmat Haridy
Zdroj: Journal of Microscopy and Ultrastructure; March 2017, Vol. 5 Issue: 1 p21-27, 7p
Abstrakt: Drugs and xenobiotics as well as bacterial endotoxins may reach the liver either systematically or after intestinal absorption. Therefore, cells lining the sinusoidal wall form the last barrier before blood constituents get in contact with the parenchymal cells. In this work, the ultrastructure of the cells forming the sinusoidal wall was studied after acetaminophen and Escherichia coliendotoxin treatments. Rats received acetaminophen at a dose of 1000mg/kg body weight by intraperitoneal injection once in acute and four times with a 1-week interval in chronic treatments, and E. coliendotoxin at a dose of 5mg/kg of body weight by intraperitoneal injection once in acute and four times with a 1-week interval in chronic treatments. Tissue samples were collected for scanning and transmission electron microscopy. Swelling of sinusoidal endothelial cells was noticed in both acute intoxicated groups with narrowing of the fenestrae, whereas large gaps were formed in chronic toxicity. Activation of Kupffer cells was a prominent common feature between the four toxicity groups. Interestingly, hepatic stellate cell activation was evident in both chronic acetaminophen and chronic endotoxin groups. Large amounts of collagen fibers were seen surrounding the hepatic stellate cells and in Disse space.
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