Journal article

Lgr5 pericentral hepatocytes are self-maintained in normal liver regeneration and susceptible to hepatocarcinogenesis

CH Ang, SH Hsu, F Guo, CT Tan, VC Yu, JE Visvader, PKH Chow, NY Fu

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | NATL ACAD SCIENCES | Published : 2019

Abstract

Emerging evidence suggests that hepatocytes are primarily maintained by self-renewal during normal liver homeostasis, as well as in response to a wide variety of hepatic injuries. However, how hepatocytes in distinct anatomic locations within the liver lobule are replenished under homeostasis and injury-induced regeneration remains elusive. Using a newly developed bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC)-transgenic mouse model, we demonstrate that Lgr5 expression in the liver is restricted to a unique subset of hepatocytes most adjacent to the central veins. Genetic lineage tracing revealed that pericentral Lgr5+ hepatocytes have a long lifespan and mainly contribute to their own lineage mainte..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Funding Acknowledgements

We thank the veterinarians, animal technicians, and staffs from FACS and Advance Bioimaging facilities at Duke-NUS and SingHealth for their technical support. We give special thanks to E.S. Leman for critical reading and insightful comments on the manuscript. C.H.A. is supported by Khoo Postdoctoral Fellowship Award. This work was supported by Duke-NUS Faculty Start-up Fund and Khoo Bridge Funding Award.