Short-Term Fasting Induces Hepatocytes’ Stress Response and Increases Their Resilience
Patrik Prša, Izak Patrik Miller, Barbara Kramar, Dušan Šuput, Irina Milisav

TL;DR
Short-term fasting in rats triggers a stress response in liver cells that makes them more resilient to damage.
Contribution
The study identifies hydrogen peroxide as a key mediator of fasting-induced stress resilience in hepatocytes.
Findings
Fasting-induced stress response in hepatocytes prevents caspase-9 activation and persists after cell isolation.
Adding glucose oxidase to non-fasted cells mimics the stress response seen in fasted cells.
Fasting-induced resilience could inform clinical strategies for improving cell survival in transplants and liver diseases.
Abstract
Fasting leads to a range of metabolic adaptations that have developed through evolution, as humans and other mammals have unequal access to food over the circadian cycle and are therefore adapted to fasting and feeding cycles. We have investigated the role of a single fasting episode in rats in triggering the stress response of liver hepatocytes. Since the stress responses were observed in both animals and isolated cells, we investigated whether the effects of the animal stressor could persist in the cells after isolation. By measuring staurosporine-induced apoptosis, stress signalling, and oxidative and antioxidant responses in hepatocytes from fasted and ad libitum-fed animals, we found that only fasting animals elicited a stress response that prevented caspase-9 activation and persisted in isolated cells. The addition of glucose oxidase, a hydrogen peroxide-producing enzyme, to the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDietary Effects on Health · Circadian rhythm and melatonin · Genetics, Aging, and Longevity in Model Organisms
