| Literature DB >> 35936214 |
Chaoliang Tang1,2, Hao Chen2,3, Lai Jiang2,4, Lianxin Liu5,6,7.
Abstract
The regenerative capacity of the liver decreases with increase in age. In recent years, studies in mice have found that the regenerative capacity of the liver is associated with changes in the immune system of the liver, cytokines in the body, aging-related epigenetic modifications in the cell, and intracellular signaling pathways. In the immune system of the aging liver, monocytes and macrophages play an important role in tissue repair. During tissue repair, monocytes and macrophages undergo a series of functional and phenotypic changes to initiate and maintain tissue repair. Studies have discovered that knocking out macrophages in the liver during the repair phase results in significant impairment of liver regeneration. Furthermore, as the body ages, the secretion and function of cytokines undergo a series of changes. For example, the levels of interleukin-6, transforming growth factor-alpha, hepatocyte growth factor, and vascular endothelial growth factor undergo changes that alter hepatocyte regulation, thereby affecting its proliferation. In addition, body aging is accompanied by cellular aging, which leads to changes in gene expression and epigenetic modifications. Additionally, this in turn causes alterations in cell function, morphology, and division and affects the regenerative capacity of the liver. As the body ages, the activity of associated functional proteins, such as CCAAT-enhancer-binding proteins, p53, and switch/sucrose nonfermentable complex, changes in the liver, leading to alterations in several signaling pathways, such as the Hippo, PI3K-Akt, mTOR, and STAT3 pathways. Therefore, in recent years, research on aging and liver regeneration has primarily focused on the immune system, signaling pathways, epigenetic changes of senescent cells, and cytokine secretion in the liver. Hence, this review details the roles of these influencing factors in liver regeneration and impact of aging-related factors.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35936214 PMCID: PMC9352489 DOI: 10.1155/2022/9018811
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oxid Med Cell Longev ISSN: 1942-0994 Impact factor: 7.310
Figure 1The diagram of ROS and its related pathway in liver regeneration.
Figure 2Regulation of the immune microenvironment by TCRβ rearrangement and subsequent effects on hepatocyte regeneration.
Figure 3The decrease of NAD+ not only affect the expression of mitochondria-related genes in the nucleus but also can protect mitochondria by regulating the activities of oxidase and reductase in the cytoplasm. Reduced levels of NAD+ also increase the stability of the genome through affecting the activity of PARPs and Sirtuins.
Significantly regulated miRNAs during HSC activation. References upregulated.
| References | Up-regulated | Down-regulated |
|---|---|---|
| Guo et al. 2009b [ | miR− | miR−15, − |
|
| ||
| Ji et al. 2009 [ | miR-27a, −27b, −30a, −30c, −30d, −130a, −130b, −450, −455 | miR-9, −19b, −301, −520b, −520c, −721 |
|
| ||
| Maubach et al. 2011 [ | Let-7b, −7c, −7e, miR-125b, − | Let-7f, miR−10a, − |
|
| ||
| Chen et al. 2011 [ | miR-31, −34b, −34c, −125b−5p, − | miR-10a−5p, −101a, − |
|
| ||
| Lakner et al. 2012 [ | miR−34c, −184, −221 | miR− |
|
| ||
| Raschzok et al. 2011 [ | miR33, -153, -298, -301b, -489, -743b, -883 | |
|
| ||
| Castro et al. 2010 [ | miR19A, - | |
Summary of published data regarding microRNA microarray profiling of activating primary rat HSCs. miRNAs which display an overlap in different published data sets are displayed in bold.
Figure 4The molecular mechanisms of certain miRNAs to regulate liver regeneration.
Figure 5Cytokines activate NF-κB and STAT-3 via corresponding receptors in hepatocytes and then initiate the transcription of immediate early genes. The final transition into G1 phase and the transcription of cell cycle genes is supported by the activation of several transcription factors.
Figure 6Schematic diagram of the aging-related changes in the liver. During the aging process of the liver, a series of alterations was observed in genes, proteins, metabolites, etc. The oxidative homeostasis was disrupted, thus leading to oxidative stress.