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  5. HCC Is promoted by bacterial translocation and TLR-4 signaling: A new paradigm for chemoprevention and management

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Letter
English
2012

HCC Is promoted by bacterial translocation and TLR-4 signaling: A new paradigm for chemoprevention and management

0 Datasets

0 Files

English
2012
Hepatology
Vol 56 (5)
DOI: 10.1002/hep.26080

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Josep M. Llovet
Josep M. Llovet

Translational Research In Hepatic Oncology

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Sara Toffanin
Helena Cornellà
Andrew Harrington
+4 more

Abstract

Increased translocation of intestinal bacteria is a hallmark of chronic liver disease and contributes to hepatic inflammation and fibrosis. Here we tested the hypothesis that the intestinal microbiota and Toll-like receptors (TLRs) promote hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), a long-term consequence of chronic liver injury, inflammation, and fibrosis. Hepatocarcinogenesis in chronically injured livers depended on the intestinal microbiota and TLR4 activation in non-bone-marrow-derived resident liver cells. TLR4 and the intestinal microbiota were not required for HCC initiation but for HCC promotion, mediating increased proliferation, expression of the hepatomitogen epiregulin, and prevention of apoptosis. Gut sterilization restricted to late stages of hepatocarcinogenesis reduced HCC, suggesting that the intestinal microbiota and TLR4 represent therapeutic targets for HCC prevention in advanced liver disease.

How to cite this publication

Sara Toffanin, Helena Cornellà, Andrew Harrington, Josep M. Llovet, Roberto J. Groszmann, Yasuko Iwakiri, Tamar H. Taddei (2012). HCC Is promoted by bacterial translocation and TLR-4 signaling: A new paradigm for chemoprevention and management. Hepatology, 56(5), pp. 1998-2000, DOI: 10.1002/hep.26080.

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Publication Details

Type

Letter

Year

2012

Authors

7

Datasets

0

Total Files

0

Language

English

Journal

Hepatology

DOI

10.1002/hep.26080

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