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Humanized mouse liver reveals endothelial control of essential hepatic metabolic functions.

Citation
Kaffe, E., et al. “Humanized Mouse Liver Reveals Endothelial Control Of Essential Hepatic Metabolic Functions.”. Cell, pp. 3793-3809.e26.
Center Yale University
Featured
Author Eleanna Kaffe, Manolis Roulis, Jun Zhao, Rihao Qu, Esen Sefik, Haris Mirza, Jing Zhou, Yunjiang Zheng, Georgia Charkoftaki, Vasilis Vasiliou, Daniel F Vatner, Wajahat Z Mehal, AlcHepNet, Yuval Kluger, Richard A Flavell
Keywords FZD5, WNT2, bile acid conjugation, cholesterol, fibrosis, humanized liver, lipidomics, liver sinusoidal endothelial cells, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, stellate cells
Abstract

Hepatocytes, the major metabolic hub of the body, execute functions that are human-specific, altered in human disease, and currently thought to be regulated through endocrine and cell-autonomous mechanisms. Here, we show that key metabolic functions of human hepatocytes are controlled by non-parenchymal cells (NPCs) in their microenvironment. We developed mice bearing human hepatic tissue composed of human hepatocytes and NPCs, including human immune, endothelial, and stellate cells. Humanized livers reproduce human liver architecture, perform vital human-specific metabolic/homeostatic processes, and model human pathologies, including fibrosis and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). Leveraging species mismatch and lipidomics, we demonstrate that human NPCs control metabolic functions of human hepatocytes in a paracrine manner. Mechanistically, we uncover a species-specific interaction whereby WNT2 secreted by sinusoidal endothelial cells controls cholesterol uptake and bile acid conjugation in hepatocytes through receptor FZD5. These results reveal the essential microenvironmental regulation of hepatic metabolism and its human-specific aspects.

Year of Publication
2023
Journal
Cell
Volume
186
Issue
18
Number of Pages
3793-3809.e26
Date Published
08/2023
ISSN Number
1097-4172
DOI
10.1016/j.cell.2023.07.017
Alternate Journal
Cell
PMID
37562401
PMCID
PMC10544749
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