Litcius/Paper detail

Chemically induced revitalization of damaged hepatocytes for regenerative liver repair

Pengyan Lin, Yunfei Bai, Xin-Xin Nian, Jun Chi, Tianzhe Chen, Jing Zhang, Wenpeng Zhang, Bin Zhou, Yang Liu, Yang Zhao

2023iScience11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In prolonged liver injury, hepatocytes undergo partial identity loss with decreased regenerative capacity, resulting in liver failure. Here, we identified a five compound (5C) combination that could restore hepatocyte identity and reverse the damage-associated phenotype (e.g., dysfunction, senescence, epithelial to mesenchymal transition, growth arrest, and pro-inflammatory gene expression) in damaged hepatocytes (dHeps) from CCl4-induced mice with chronic liver injury, resembling a direct chemical reprogramming approach. Systemic administration of 5C in mice with chronic liver injury promoted hepatocyte regeneration, improved liver function, and ameliorated liver fibrosis. The hepatocyte-associated transcriptional networks were reestablished with chemical treatment as revealed by motif analysis of ATAC-seq, and a hepatocyte-enriched transcription factor, Foxa2, was found to be essential for hepatocyte revitalization. Overall, our findings indicate that the phenotype and transcriptional program of dHeps can be reprogrammed to generate functional and regenerative hepatocytes by using only small molecules, as an alternative approach to liver repair and regeneration.

Topics & Concepts

FOXA2HepatocyteReprogrammingLiver regenerationRegenerative medicineHepatocyte nuclear factorsLiver injuryCell biologyRegeneration (biology)Hepatocyte nuclear factor 4Transcription factorPhenotypeBiologyCancer researchStem cellPharmacologyGeneBiochemistryIn vitroNuclear receptorLiver physiology and pathologyPancreatic function and diabetesOrgan Transplantation Techniques and Outcomes