4.5 Article

Phenotype reversion in fetal human liver epithelial cells identifies the role of an intermediate meso-endodermal stage before hepatic maturation

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELL SCIENCE
Volume 121, Issue 7, Pages 1002-1013

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jcs.019315

Keywords

fetal; epithelial; liver; mesenchymal; stem cells; differentiation

Categories

Funding

  1. NCI NIH HHS [P30 CA013330, P30 CA13330] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NIDDK NIH HHS [R01 DK46952, P30 DK41296, R01 DK046952, P01 DK52956, P01 DK052956, R01 DK071111, R01 DK046952-06, R01 DK071111-01A1, P30 DK041296-209004, P30 DK041296] Funding Source: Medline
  3. PHS HHS [P20 M075037] Funding Source: Medline

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Understanding the biological potential of fetal stem/progenitor cells will help define mechanisms in liver development and homeostasis. We isolated epithelial fetal human liver cells and established phenotype-specific changes in gene expression during continuous culture conditions. Fetal human liver epithelial cells displayed stem cell properties with multilineage gene expression, extensive proliferation and generation of mesenchymal lineage cells, although the initial epithelial phenotype was rapidly supplanted by meso-endodermal phenotype in culture. This meso-endodermal phenotype was genetically regulated through cytokine signaling, including transforming growth factor beta, bone morphogenetic protein, fibroblast growth factor and other signaling pathways. Reactivation of HNF3 alpha (FOXA1) transcription factor, a driver of hepatic specification in the primitive endoderm, indicated that the meso-endodermal phenotype represented an earlier developmental stage of cells. We found that fetal liver epithelial cells formed mature hepatocytes in vivo, including after genetic manipulation using lentiviral vectors, offering convenient assays for analysis of further cell differentiation and fate. Taken together, these studies demonstrate plasticity in fetal liver epithelial stem cells, offer paradigms for defining mechanisms regulating lineage switching in stem cells, and provide potential avenues for regulating cell phenotypes for applications of stem cells, such as for cell therapy.

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