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Hepatic NF-kB-inducing kinase (NIK) suppresses mouse liver regeneration in acute and chronic liver diseases.

Citation
Xiong, Y., et al. “Hepatic Nf-Kb-Inducing Kinase (Nik) Suppresses Mouse Liver Regeneration In Acute And Chronic Liver Diseases.”. Elife.
Center University of Michigan
Author Yi Xiong, Adriana Souza Torsoni, Feihua Wu, Hong Shen, Yan Liu, Xiao Zhong, Mark J Canet, Yatrik M Shah, Bishr Omary, Yong Liu, Liangyou Rui
Keywords Cell Biology, liver inflammation, Liver injury, Liver regeneration, mouse
Abstract

Reparative hepatocyte replication is impaired in chronic liver disease, contributing to disease progression; however, the underlying mechanism remains elusive. Here, we identify Map3k14 (also known as NIK) and its substrate Chuk (also called IKKα) as unrecognized suppressors of hepatocyte replication. Chronic liver disease is associated with aberrant activation of hepatic NIK pathways. We found that hepatocyte-specific deletion of or substantially accelerated mouse hepatocyte proliferation and liver regeneration following partial-hepatectomy. Hepatotoxin treatment or high fat diet feeding inhibited the ability of partial-hepatectomy to stimulate hepatocyte replication; remarkably, inactivation of hepatic NIK markedly increased reparative hepatocyte proliferation under these liver disease conditions. Mechanistically, NIK and IKKα suppressed the mitogenic JAK2/STAT3 pathway, thereby inhibiting cell cycle progression. Our data suggest that hepatic NIK and IKKα act as rheostats for liver regeneration by restraining overgrowth. Pathological activation of hepatic NIK or IKKα likely blocks hepatocyte replication, contributing to liver disease progression.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
eLife
Volume
7
Date Published
12/2018
ISSN Number
2050-084X
DOI
10.7554/eLife.34152
Alternate Journal
Elife
PMID
30070632
PMCID
PMC6078493
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