4.7 Review

Tight Junction Proteins and the Biology of Hepatobiliary Disease

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms21030825

Keywords

Claudin; occludin; blood-biliary barrier; chronic liver disease; hepatocellular carcinoma; cholangiocellular carcinoma; NISCH syndrome

Funding

  1. ARC, Paris
  2. Institut Hospital-Universitaire, Strasbourg (TheraHCC) [TheraHCC2.0IHUARCIHU201301187, IHUARC2019 IHU201901299]
  3. European Union [ERC-AdG-2014-671231-HEPCIR, EU H2020-667273-HEPCAR, ERC-PoC-2016-PRELICAN, ERC-PoC-2018HEPCAN]
  4. Agence nationale de recherche sur le sida et les hepatites virales (ANRS) [ECTZ35076]
  5. Foundation of the University of Strasbourg
  6. French National Research Agency as part of the Investments for the future
  7. German Research Foundation (DFG) [RO 5983/1-1]
  8. [LABEX ANR-10-LABX-0028_HEPSYS]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Tight junctions (TJ) are intercellular adhesion complexes on epithelial cells and composed of integral membrane proteins as well as cytosolic adaptor proteins. Tight junction proteins have been recognized to play a key role in health and disease. In the liver, TJ proteins have several functions: they contribute as gatekeepers for paracellular diffusion between adherent hepatocytes or cholangiocytes to shape the blood-biliary barrier (BBIB) and maintain tissue homeostasis. At non-junctional localizations, TJ proteins are involved in key regulatory cell functions such as differentiation, proliferation, and migration by recruiting signaling proteins in response to extracellular stimuli. Moreover, TJ proteins are hepatocyte entry factors for the hepatitis C virus (HCV)-a major cause of liver disease and cancer worldwide. Perturbation of TJ protein expression has been reported in chronic HCV infection, cholestatic liver diseases as well as hepatobiliary carcinoma. Here we review the physiological function of TJ proteins in the liver and their implications in hepatobiliary diseases.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available