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Fate tracing reveals hepatic stellate cells as dominant contributors to liver fibrosis independent of its aetiology. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Organ fibrosis leads to serious health issues in chronic diseases, but understanding which cells contribute to this process is limited, making it hard to create effective treatments.
  • Various cell types are believed to contribute to the formation of myofibroblasts, but their roles differ based on the organ and disease type.
  • Research using a new mouse model reveals that hepatic stellate cells (HSCs) are responsible for a large majority (82-96%) of myofibroblasts in various liver disease models, suggesting they are the key target for antifibrotic treatments for liver conditions.

Article Abstract

Although organ fibrosis causes significant morbidity and mortality in chronic diseases, the lack of detailed knowledge about specific cellular contributors mediating fibrogenesis hampers the design of effective antifibrotic therapies. Different cellular sources, including tissue-resident and bone marrow-derived fibroblasts, pericytes and epithelial cells, have been suggested to give rise to myofibroblasts, but their relative contributions remain controversial, with profound differences between organs and different diseases. Here we employ a novel Cre-transgenic mouse that marks 99% of hepatic stellate cells (HSCs), a liver-specific pericyte population, to demonstrate that HSCs give rise to 82-96% of myofibroblasts in models of toxic, cholestatic and fatty liver disease. Moreover, we exclude that HSCs function as facultative epithelial progenitor cells in the injured liver. On the basis these findings, HSCs should be considered the primary cellular target for antifibrotic therapies across all types of liver disease.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4059406PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ncomms3823DOI Listing

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