4.8 Article

Functional compensation precedes recovery of tissue mass following acute liver injury

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-19558-3

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Cholangiocarcinoma Foundation Research Fellowship [F32DK111151]
  2. American Liver Foundation Charles Trey, MD Memorial Post-doctoral Research Fellowship [R01DK090311, R01DK105198, R24OD017870]
  3. Claudia Adams Barr Program for Excellence in Cancer Research
  4. Beckman Young Investigator Program
  5. Sloan Fellowship in Chemistry
  6. NIH [1DP2GM1194192, RM1HG0061931]
  7. MIT Stem Cell Initiative through Fondation MIT
  8. NIH/NIDDK [P30DK120531, DK62277, DK100287, CA204586]
  9. Endowed Chair for Experimental Pathology, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine
  10. Searle Scholars Program

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The liver plays a central role in metabolism, protein synthesis and detoxification. It possesses unique regenerative capacity upon injury. While many factors regulating cellular proliferation during liver repair have been identified, the mechanisms by which the injured liver maintains vital functions prior to tissue recovery are unknown. Here, we identify a new phase of functional compensation following acute liver injury that occurs prior to cellular proliferation. By coupling single-cell RNA-seq with in situ transcriptional analyses in two independent murine liver injury models, we discover adaptive reprogramming to ensure expression of both injury response and core liver function genes dependent on macrophage-derived WNT/beta -catenin signaling. Interestingly, transcriptional compensation is most prominent in non-proliferating cells, clearly delineating two temporally distinct phases of liver recovery. Overall, our work describes a mechanism by which the liver maintains essential physiological functions prior to cellular reconstitution and characterizes macrophage-derived WNT signals required for this compensation. The liver possesses the ability to regenerate following sudden injury. Here, the authors use single-cell RNA-sequencing and in situ transcriptional analyses to identify a new phase of liver regeneration in mice aimed at maintaining essential functions throughout the regenerative process.

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