Morphogens and hepatic stellate cell fate regulation in chronic liver disease.

JOURNAL OF GASTROENTEROLOGY AND HEPATOLOGY(2012)

Cited 37|Views8
No score
Abstract
Hepatic stellate cells (HSC) are the liver mesenchymal cell type which responds to hepatocellular damage and participates in wound healing. Although HSC myofibroblastic trans-differentiation (activation) is implicated in excessive extracellular matrix deposition, molecular understanding of this phenotypic switch from the viewpoint of cell fate regulation is limited. Recent studies demonstrate the roles of anti-adipogenic morphogens (Wnt, Necdin, Shh) in epigenetic repression of the HSC differentiation gene Ppar gamma as a causal event in HSC activation. These morphogens have positive cross-interactions which converge to epigenetic repression of Ppar gamma involving the methyl-CpG binding protein MeCP2. However, these morphogens expressed by activated HSC may also participate in cross-talk between HSC and hepatoblasts/hepatocytes to support liver regeneration, and their aberrant regulation may contribute to liver tumorigenesis. Implications of HSC-derived morphogens in these possibilities are discussed.
More
Translated text
Key words
necdin,Ppar gamma,Shh,Wnt
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined