4.3 Article

Biliary tree stem/progenitor cells in glands of extrahepatic and intraheptic bile ducts: an anatomical in situ study yielding evidence of maturational lineages

期刊

JOURNAL OF ANATOMY
卷 220, 期 2, 页码 186-199

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1469-7580.2011.01462.x

关键词

albumin; biliary tree; endoderm; insulin; liver; multipotent stem cells; pancreas; peribiliary glands; secretin receptor

资金

  1. University 'Sapienza' of Rome, FIRB [RBAP10Z7FS 001]
  2. FIRB [RBAP10Z7FS_004]
  3. Consorzio Interuniversitario Trapianti d'Organo, Rome, Italy
  4. University of North Carolina (UNC) via North Carolina Biotechnology Center (NCBC)
  5. GigaCyte Biotech (Branford, CT)
  6. Vesta Therapeutics (Bethesda, MD)
  7. NIH [AA014243, IP30-DK065933]
  8. NIDDK [DK34987]
  9. [2009X84L84 001]
  10. [2009X84L84_002]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Stem/progenitors have been identified intrahepatically in the canals of Hering and extrahepatically in glands of the biliary tree. Glands of the biliary tree (peribiliary glands) are tubulo-alveolar glands with mucinous and serous acini, located deep within intrahepatic and extrahepatic bile ducts. We have shown that biliary tree stem/progenitors (BTSCs) are multipotent, giving rise in vitro and in vivo to hepatocytes, cholangiocytes or pancreatic islets. Cells with the phenotype of BTSCs are located at the bottom of the peribiliary glands near the fibromuscular layer. They are phenotypically heterogeneous, expressing transcription factors as well as surface and cytoplasmic markers for stem/progenitors of liver (e.g. SOX9/17), pancreas (e.g. PDX1) and endoderm (e.g. SOX17, EpCAM, NCAM, CXCR4, Lgr5, OCT4) but not for mature markers (e.g. albumin, secretin receptor or insulin). Subpopulations co-expressing liver and pancreatic markers (e.g. PDX1+/SOX17+) are EpCAM+/-, and are assumed to be the most primitive of the BTSC subpopulations. Their descendants undergo a maturational lineage process from the interior to the surface of ducts and vary in the mature cells generated: pancreatic cells in hepatopancreatic ducts, liver cells in large intrahepatic bile ducts, and bile duct cells along most of the biliary tree. We hypothesize that there is ongoing organogenesis throughout life, with BTSCs giving rise to hepatic stem cells in the canals of Hering and to committed progenitors within the pancreas. The BTSCs are likely to be central to normal tissue turnover and injury repair and to be key elements in the pathophysiology of liver, pancreas and biliary tree diseases, including oncogenesis.

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