Viral hepatitis resulting in chronic liver disease is an important clinical challenge and insight into the cellular processes that drive pathogenesis will be critical in order to develop new diagnostic and therapeutic options. Nuclear inclusions in viral and non-viral hepatitis are well documented and have diagnostic significance in some disease contexts. However, the origins and functional consequences of these nuclear inclusions remain elusive. To date the clinical observation of nuclear inclusions in viral and non-viral hepatitis has not been explored at depth in murine models of liver disease. Herein, we report that in a transgenic model of hepatitis B surface antigen mediated hepatitis, murine hepatocytes exhibit nuclear inclusions. Cells bearing nuclear inclusions were more likely to express markers of cell proliferation. We also established a correlation between these inclusions and oxidative stress. N-acetyl cysteine treatment effectively reduced oxidative stress levels, relieved endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress, and the number of nuclear inclusions we observed in the transgenic mice. Our results suggest that the presence of nuclear inclusions in hepatocytes correlates with oxidative stress and cellular proliferation in a model of antigen mediated hepatitis.
Follicular lymphoma (FL) usually has an indolent course and presents with painless, waxing and waning lymphadenopathy in the absence of systemic symptoms. It is uncommon for FL to present outside of lymph nodes, although it can develop in the gastrointestinal tract, skin, thyroid, and testes. Central nervous system (CNS) involvement in FL is rare. Most CNS lymphomas are diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, although Burkitt lymphoma, lymphoblastic lymphoma, and peripheral T-cell lymphoma are also observed. These tumors usually involve white matter but may also involve gray matter. Lymphomas of the dura are very uncommon and are usually mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue lymphomas. Here, we present a case of FL of the dura arising in a 62-year-old woman that was responsive to chemotherapy. According to a literature review, there have been 15 previously reported cases of FL of the dura. Dural FL has been most frequently treated with radiation and chemotherapy. Patients were still alive in all cases in which follow-up was reported. Although the sample size is small, these data suggest that dural FL, like other forms of FL, is an indolent disease that is associated with prolonged survival despite usually being incurable.
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