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The hippo pathway: A master regulator of liver metabolism, regeneration, and disease

Journal

FASEB JOURNAL
Volume 35, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1096/fj.202002284RR

Keywords

Hippo signaling pathway; liver cancer; liver metabolism; liver regeneration

Funding

  1. Canadian Liver Foundation
  2. American Society of Transplantation
  3. Canadian Donation and Transplant Research Program
  4. Toronto General and Western Hospital Foundation

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The liver is the only visceral organ in the body with a tremendous capacity to regenerate in response to insults. Liver regeneration is a complicated process involving activation of non-parenchymal cells and hepatocytes proliferation. Understanding the mechanisms that control liver regeneration is critical for therapies and patient care.
The liver is the only visceral organ in the body with a tremendous capacity to regenerate in response to insults that induce inflammation, cell death, and injury. Liver regeneration is a complicated process involving a well-orchestrated activation of non-parenchymal cells in the injured area and proliferation of undamaged hepatocytes. Furthermore, the liver has a Hepatostat, defined as adjustment of its volume to that required for homeostasis. Understanding the mechanisms that control different steps of liver regeneration is critical to informing therapies for liver repair, to help patients with liver disease. The Hippo signaling pathway is well known for playing an essential role in the control and regulation of liver size, regeneration, stem cell self-renewal, and liver cancer. Thus, the Hippo pathway regulates dynamic cell fates in liver, and in absence of its downstream effectors YAP and TAZ, liver regeneration is severely impaired, and the proliferative expansion of liver cells blocked. We will mainly review upstream mechanisms activating the Hippo signaling pathway following partial hepatectomy in mouse model and patients, its roles during different steps of liver regeneration, metabolism, and cancer. We will also discuss how targeting the Hippo signaling cascade might improve liver regeneration and suppress liver tumorigenesis.

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