4.3 Article

Autophagy promotes hepatic differentiation of hepatic progenitor cells by regulating the Wnt/-catenin signaling pathway

Journal

JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR HISTOLOGY
Volume 50, Issue 1, Pages 75-90

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10735-018-9808-x

Keywords

Autophagy; Hepatic progenitor cells; Differentiation; Wnt; -catenin signaling

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81270518, 81470858]
  2. Program for Shanghai Outstanding Academic Leaders [2015056]

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Hepatic progenitor cells (HPCs) can be activated when the liver suffers persistent and severe damage and can differentiate into hepatocytes to maintain liver regeneration and homeostasis. However, the molecular mechanism underlying the hepatic differentiation of HPCs is unclear. Therefore, in this study, we aimed to investigate the roles of autophagy and the Wnt/-catenin signaling pathway during hepatic differentiation of HPCs in vivo and in vitro. First, immunohistochemistry, immunofluorescence and electron microscopy showed that Atg5 and -catenin were highly expressed in human fibrotic liver and mouse liver injury induced by feeding a 50% choline-deficient diet plus 0.15% ethionine solution in drinking water (CDE diet) for 21days; in addition, these factors were expressed in CK19-positive HPCs. Second, Western blotting and immunofluorescence confirmed that CK19-positive HPCs incubated in differentiation medium for 7days can differentiate into hepatocytes and that differentiated HPCs were able to take up ICG and secrete albumin and urea. Further investigation via Western blotting, immunofluorescence and electron microscopy revealed autophagy and the Wnt/-catenin pathway to be activated during hepatic differentiation of HPCs. Next, we found that inhibiting autophagy by downregulating Atg5 gene expression impaired hepatic differentiation of HPCs and inhibited activation of the Wnt/-catenin pathway, which was rescued by overexpression of the -catenin gene. Moreover, downregulating -catenin gene expression without inhibiting autophagy still impeded the differentiation of HPCs. Finally, coimmunoprecipitation demonstrated that P62 forms a complex with phosphorylated glycogen synthase kinase 3 beta (pGSK3). Third, in mouse CDE-induced liver injury, immunohistochemistry and immunofluorescence confirmed that downregulating Atg5 gene expression inhibited autophagy, thus impeding hepatic differentiation of HPCs and inhibiting activation of the Wnt/-catenin pathway. As observed in vitro, overexpression of -catenin rescued this phenomenon caused by autophagy inhibition, though decreasing -catenin levels without autophagy inhibition still impeded HPC differentiation. We also found that HPCs differentiated into hepatocytes in human fibrotic liver tissue. Collectively, these results demonstrate that autophagy promotes HPC differentiation by regulating Wnt/-catenin signaling. Our results are the first to identify a role for autophagy in promoting the hepatic differentiation of HPCs.

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