Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Part 1 Assessing and utilizing the diagnostic or prognostic power of biomarkers
- Part 2 Biomarkers of kidney disease and dysfunction
- Part 3 Biomarkers of bone disease and dysfunction
- Part 4 Biomarkers of liver disease and dysfunction
- 15 Biomarkers of hepatic disease
- 16 The immunogenetics of metabolic liver disease
- 17 Toxicogenetic markers of liver dysfunction
- 18 Prognosis and management of patients with acute liver failure
- 19 Biomarkers in artificial and bioartificial liver support
- 20 Prognostic markers in liver disease
- 21 Apoptosis: biomarkers and the key role of mitochondria
- 22 Liver regeneration: mechanisms and markers
- 23 Determinants of responses to viruses and self in liver disease
- 24 IL-6-type cytokines and signalling in inflammation
- Part 5 Biomarkers of gastrointestinal disease and dysfunction
- Part 6 Biomarkers in toxicology
- Part 7 Biomarkers of cardiovascular disease and dysfunction
- Part 8 Biomarkers of neurological disease and dysfunction
- Part 9 Biomarkers in transplantation
- Index
17 - Toxicogenetic markers of liver dysfunction
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 August 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Part 1 Assessing and utilizing the diagnostic or prognostic power of biomarkers
- Part 2 Biomarkers of kidney disease and dysfunction
- Part 3 Biomarkers of bone disease and dysfunction
- Part 4 Biomarkers of liver disease and dysfunction
- 15 Biomarkers of hepatic disease
- 16 The immunogenetics of metabolic liver disease
- 17 Toxicogenetic markers of liver dysfunction
- 18 Prognosis and management of patients with acute liver failure
- 19 Biomarkers in artificial and bioartificial liver support
- 20 Prognostic markers in liver disease
- 21 Apoptosis: biomarkers and the key role of mitochondria
- 22 Liver regeneration: mechanisms and markers
- 23 Determinants of responses to viruses and self in liver disease
- 24 IL-6-type cytokines and signalling in inflammation
- Part 5 Biomarkers of gastrointestinal disease and dysfunction
- Part 6 Biomarkers in toxicology
- Part 7 Biomarkers of cardiovascular disease and dysfunction
- Part 8 Biomarkers of neurological disease and dysfunction
- Part 9 Biomarkers in transplantation
- Index
Summary
Introduction
Toxicogenetics is the study of the genetic basis for variability in toxic injury – in this instance, toxic liver injury. It differs in three ways from pharmacogenetics – the genetic basis for variability in drug disposition – through its consideration of: (i) toxic (liver) injury rather than drug disposition; (ii) genetic variability in pathways that both induce and prevent toxic liver injury; and (iii) causes of damage wider than iatrogenic (drug-induced) injury. These additional causes of toxic liver injury may include other xenobiotics (e.g. environmental toxins), liver trauma and pathology (e.g. ischaemia/reperfusion injury), pathogens (e.g. hepatitis viruses) and extremes of physiological function (e.g. oxidative stress secondary to iron accumulation in haemochromatosis). Characteristic sequelae of all these primary mediators of toxic liver injury are a progression to oxidative stress and the production of secondary mediators of liver damage. The former reflects a shift of the cell's redox status away from its customary reduced status and the latter includes production of tumour necrosis factor (TNF) and cytokines by nonparenchymal cells.
The quantitative study of the consequences of toxicogenetic gene expression – toxicogenomics – is considered by Tugwood and Beckett in Chapter 28.
How can genetic diversity affect toxic liver injury?
Toxicogenetic diversity may determine the extent of expression of both the original toxic insult and the secondary response it elicits, as well as the function of endogenous cytoprotection.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Biomarkers of DiseaseAn Evidence-Based Approach, pp. 190 - 198Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2002
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