| Literature DB >> 35053214 |
Tao Lin1, Rilu Feng1, Roman Liebe2, Hong-Lei Weng1.
Abstract
Massive hepatic necrosis is the most severe lesion in acute liver failure, yet a portion of patients manage to survive and recover from this high-risk and harsh disease syndrome. The mechanisms underlying recovery remain largely unknown to date. Recent research progress highlights a key role of liver progenitor cells, the smallest biliary cells, in the maintenance of liver homeostasis and thus survival. These stem-like cells rapidly proliferate and take over crucial hepatocyte functions in a severely damaged liver. Hence, the new findings not only add to our understanding of the huge regenerative capability of the liver, but also provide potential new targets for the pharmacological management of acute liver failure in clinical practice.Entities:
Keywords: HNF4α; activin; acute liver failure; acute-on-chronic liver failure; coagulation factor; liver progenitor cell; massive hepatic necrosis; sepsis; systemic inflammatory response syndrome
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35053214 PMCID: PMC8773550 DOI: 10.3390/biom12010066
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomolecules ISSN: 2218-273X
Figure 1Activation of liver progenitor cells in massive hepatic necrosis-induced acute liver failure. Massive hepatic necrosis and subsequent severe inflammation activates liver progenitor cells (LPC). The first week since the onset of acute decompensation is a gold window for the survival of acute liver failure (ALF). Whether LPC can take over key hepatocyte functions, e.g., initiating the activin-HNF4α-coagulation factors axis and synthesis of albumin, among other proteins, determines clinical outcome of patients. Systemic inflammatory response syndrome occurs between day 3 and day 15 after disease initiation [12]. The interaction between the inflammatory environment and LPC is crucial for disease progression. After two weeks, intermediate hepatocyte-like cells (IHLC) emerge, suggesting that LPC begin to differentiate towards hepatocytes. Finalizing LPC-to-hepatocyte differentiation is characterized by inactivation of cholangiocyte lineage genes such as SOX9 and intensifying the expression of hepatocyte master genes such as HNF4α.