Research progress in lineage tracing to explore hepatic parenchymal cell regeneration and repair mechanisms.
10.3760/cma.j.cn501113-20220621-00337
- Author:
Li LI
1
;
Ping WANG
1
Author Information
1. Liver Disease Center, Beijing Friendship Hospital, Capital Medical University, Beijing 100050, China.
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- Keywords:
Cholangiocytes;
Hepatic stem/progenitor cells;
Hepatocyte;
Hepatocyte regeneration;
Lineage tracing
- MeSH:
Hepatocytes/metabolism*;
Liver/metabolism*;
Bile Ducts;
Stem Cells;
Liver Regeneration/physiology*;
Cell Differentiation
- From:
Chinese Journal of Hepatology
2023;31(7):781-784
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
Hepatic parenchymal cells are a type of liver cells that performs important functions such as metabolism and detoxification. The contribution of hepatic parenchymal cells, bile duct cells, and hepatic stem/progenitor cells to new hepatic parenchymal cells in the process of liver injury repair has become a controversial issue due to their strong proliferation ability. Lineage tracing technology, which has emerged in the past decade as a new method for exploring the origin of cells, can trace specific type of cells and their daughter cells by labeling cells that express the specific gene and their progeny. The article reviews the current literature on the origin and contribution of hepatic parenchymal cells by this technique. About 98% of new hepatic parenchymal cells originate from the existing hepatic parenchymal cells during liver homeostasis and after acute injury. However, under conditions of severe liver injury, such as inhibition of hepatic parenchymal cell proliferation, bile duct cells (mainly liver stem/progenitor cells) become the predominant source of hepatic parenchymal cells, contributing a steady increased hepatocyte regeneration with the extension of time.