4.5 Article

Hepatocyte Transplantation and the Differentiation Fate of Host Oval Cells in Acute Severe Hepatic Injury

Journal

CELL TRANSPLANTATION
Volume 19, Issue 2, Pages 231-243

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.3727/096368909X479848

Keywords

Cell differentiation; D-Galactosamine; Progenitor cell; Regeneration; Retrorsine

Funding

  1. National Science Council of the Republic of China [NSC95-2752-B-002-009-PAE, NSC95-2745-B-002-001, NSC96-2752-B-002-009-PAE, NSC96-2321-B-002-022, NSC97-2321-B-002-021-MY2]
  2. Buddhist Tzu-Chi General Hospital [TCRD-TPE-96-30]
  3. Buddhist Tzu-Chi University [TCMRC-C95007-02]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Oval cells and hepatocytes rarely proliferate simultaneously. This study aimed to determine the impacts of hepatocyte transplantation on the response and fate of oval cells that are activated to proliferate in acute severe hepatic injury Retrorsine + D-galactosamine (R+D-gal) treatment was used to induce acute hepatic injury and to elicit extensive activation of oval cells in male dipeptidyl peptidase IV-deficient F344 rats These rats were then randomized to receive wild-type hepatocyte transplantation or vehicle intraportally The kinetics of oval cell response and then differentiation fate were analyzed. Results showed that oval cells were activated early and differentiated into hepatocytes in R+D-gal-treated rats without hepatocyte transplantation With hepatocyte transplantation, the oval cells were recruited later and continued to proliferate in parallel with the massive proliferation of transplanted hepatocytes They formed ductules and differentiated into biliary cells. When hepatocytes were transplanted at the day when oval cells were at their peak response, the numerous activated oval cells ceased to differentiate into hepatocytes and remained in ductular form The ductular oval cells were capable of differentiating into hepatocytes again when the donor hepatocytes were inhibited to proliferate We conclude that hepatocyte transplantation changes the mechanism of liver reconstitution and affects the differentiation fate of host oval cells in acute severe hepatic injury

Authors

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

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available