4.7 Article

Hydrogen Peroxide Modulates the Proliferation/Quiescence Switch in the Liver During Embryonic Development and Posthepatectomy Regeneration

Journal

ANTIOXIDANTS & REDOX SIGNALING
Volume 22, Issue 11, Pages 921-937

Publisher

MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC
DOI: 10.1089/ars.2014.5960

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31200635, 31070766]
  2. Science & Technology Research and Development Project of Shaanxi Province [2011K12-32, 2010KJXX-06]

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Aims: The liver undergoes marked changes in the rate of proliferation during normal development and regeneration through the coordinated activity of numerous signaling pathways. Little is known, however, about the events that act upstream of these signaling pathways. Here, we explore the modulatory effects of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) on these pathways in the context of liver development and regeneration. Results: We show that H2O2 production during liver development and after partial hepatectomy is tightly regulated in time by specific H2O2-producing and scavenging proteins and dose dependently triggers two distinct pathways. Sustained elevated H2O2 levels are required for the activation of ERK signaling and trigger a shift from quiescence to proliferation. Contrastingly, sustained decreased H2O2 levels are required for the activation of p38 signaling and trigger a shift from proliferation to quiescence. Both events impact the cyclin D and Rb pathways and are involved in liver development and regeneration. Pharmacological lowering of H2O2 levels reduces the extent of fetal hepatocyte proliferation and delays the onset of liver regeneration. Chemical augmentation of H2O2 levels in adult hepatocytes triggers proliferation and delays the termination of liver regeneration. Innovation: Our results challenge the traditional view of H2O2 as a deleterious stressor in response to liver damage and identify a novel role of endogenous H2O2 in liver development and regeneration. Conclusions: Endogenous H2O2 production is tightly regulated during liver development and regeneration. H2O2 constitutes an important trigger for the proliferation and quiescence transition in hepatocytes via the concentration-dependent activation of the ERK or p38 pathway. Antioxid. Redox Signal. 22, 921-937.

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