Secondary alterations of human hepatocellular peroxisomes.
Klíčová slova
Abstraktní
The morphological and morphometric characteristics of peroxisomes in normal human liver and the peroxisomal alterations in the liver of patients with acquired or congenital non-peroxisomal diseases are reviewed. Secondary peroxisomal changes are observed in steatosis, hepatitis and cirrhosis induced by various agents (viruses, alcohol, drugs, etc.), in cholestasis, in hepatomas, in extra-hepatic cancer with or without liver metastasis, in extrahepatic inflammatory processes, in metabolic disorders affecting metabolism of carbohydrates, lipids and lipoproteins, glycoproteins, amino acids, bilirubin or copper, and in altered thyroid hormone levels. They are recognized as a proliferation of peroxisomes (increased in number and to a lesser extent in surface density and volume density) often accompanied by a minor reduction in size (at most to 68% of the mean diameter in control livers) but very rarely by an increase in mean peroxisomal diameter, and as proliferation-related changes in shape (tails, gastruloid cisternae, funnel-like constrictions, elongation, protrusions) in at least a few of the peroxisomes. These secondary alterations of the peroxisomes are clearly distinguishable from the primary changes in peroxisomes observed in the liver of patients with congenital peroxisomal disorders.