4.7 Review

Intercellular Communication between Hepatic Cells in Liver Diseases

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms20092180

Keywords

liver fibrosis; extracellular vesicles; hepatocytes; macrophages

Funding

  1. Baylor Scott & White Institute
  2. Hickam Endowed Chair, Gastroenterology, Medicine, Indiana University, a VA Research Senior Career Scientist Award
  3. VA Merit award [5I01BX000574, 1I01BX003031, 1I01BX001724, I01CX000361]
  4. NIH [DK054811, DK076898, DK107310, DK110035, DK062975, AA025997, DK108959, AA025208, DK107682, AA026917, AA026903, AA025157, AA026385]
  5. PSC Partners Seeking a Cure

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Liver diseases are perpetuated by the orchestration of hepatocytes and other hepatic non-parenchymal cells. These cells communicate and regulate with each other by secreting mediators such as peptides, hormones, and cytokines. Extracellular vesicles (EVs), small particles secreted from cells, contain proteins, DNAs, and RNAs as cargos. EVs have attracted recent research interests since they can communicate information from donor cells to recipient cells thereby regulating physiological events via delivering of specific cargo mediators. Previous studies have demonstrated that liver cells secrete elevated numbers of EVs during diseased conditions, and those EVs are internalized into other liver cells inducing disease-related reactions such as inflammation, angiogenesis, and fibrogenesis. Reactions in recipient cells are caused by proteins and RNAs carried in disease-derived EVs. This review summarizes cell-to-cell communication especially via EVs in the pathogenesis of liver diseases and their potential as a novel therapeutic target.

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