Hypoxia sensing by hepatic stellate cells leads to VEGF-dependent angiogenesis and may contribute to accelerated liver regeneration

Author:

Dirscherl KonstantinORCID,Schläpfer Martin,Roth Z’graggen Birgit,Wenger Roland H,Booy Christa,Flury-Frei Renata,Fatzer Rita,Aloman Costica,Bartosch Birke,Parent Romain,Kurtcuoglu VartanORCID,de Zélicourt Diane,Spahn Donat R.,Beck Schimmer Beatrice,Schadde Erik

Abstract

AbstractPortal vein ligation (PVL) induces liver growth prior to resection. Associating liver partition and portal vein ligation (PVL plus transection=ALPPS) or the addition of the prolyl-hydroxylase inhibitor dimethyloxalylglycine (DMOG) to PVL both accelerate growth via stabilization of HIF-α subunits. This study aims at clarifying the crosstalk of hepatocytes (HC), hepatic stellate cells (HSC) and liver sinusoidal endothelial cells (LSEC) in accelerated liver growth. In vivo, liver volume, HC proliferation, vascular density and HSC activation were assessed in PVL, ALPPS, PVL+DMOG and DMOG alone. Proliferation of HC, HSC and LSEC was determined under DMOG in vitro. Conditioned media experiments of DMOG-exposed cells were performed. ALPPS and PVL+DMOG accelerated liver growth and HC proliferation in comparison to PVL. DMOG alone did not induce HC proliferation, but led to increased vascular density, which was also observed in ALPPS and PVL+DMOG. Activated HSC were detected in ALPPS, PVL+DMOG and DMOG, again not in PVL. In vitro, DMOG had no proliferative effect on HC, but conditioned supernatant of DMOG-treated HSC induced VEGF-dependent proliferation of LSEC. Transcriptome analysis confirmed activation of proangiogenic factors in hypoxic HSC. Hypoxia signaling in HSC induces VEGF-dependent angiogenesis. HSC play a crucial role in the cellular crosstalk of rapid liver regeneration.

Funder

Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Förderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung

Jubilaeumsstiftung der Schweizerischen Mobiliar Genossenschaft, Bern, Switzerland

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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