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Mechanosensing by β1 integrin induces angiocrine signals for liver growth and survival.

Authors :
Lorenz, Linda
Axnick, Jennifer
Buschmann, Tobias
Henning, Carina
Urner, Sofia
Fang, Shentong
Nurmi, Harri
Eichhorst, Nicole
Holtmeier, Richard
Bódis, Kálmán
Hwang, Jong-Hee
Müssig, Karsten
Eberhard, Daniel
Stypmann, Jörg
Kuss, Oliver
Roden, Michael
Alitalo, Kari
Häussinger, Dieter
Lammert, Eckhard
Source :
Nature; 10/27/2018, Vol. 562 Issue 7725, p128-132, 5p, 1 Diagram, 13 Graphs
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Angiocrine signals derived from endothelial cells are an important component of intercellular communication and have a key role in organ growth, regeneration and disease<xref>1</xref>-<xref>4</xref>. These signals have been identified and studied in multiple organs, including the liver, pancreas, lung, heart, bone, bone marrow, central nervous system, retina and some cancers<xref>1</xref>-<xref>4</xref>. Here we use the developing liver as a model organ to study angiocrine signals<xref>5</xref>,<xref>6</xref>, and show that the growth rate of the liver correlates both spatially and temporally with blood perfusion to this organ. By manipulating blood flow through the liver vasculature, we demonstrate that vessel perfusion activates β1 integrin and vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 3 (VEGFR3). Notably, both β1 integrin and VEGFR3 are strictly required for normal production of hepatocyte growth factor, survival of hepatocytes and liver growth. Ex vivo perfusion of adult mouse liver and in vitro mechanical stretching of human hepatic endothelial cells illustrate that mechanotransduction alone is sufficient to turn on angiocrine signals. When the endothelial cells are mechanically stretched, angiocrine signals trigger in vitro proliferation and survival of primary human hepatocytes. Our findings uncover a signalling pathway in vascular endothelial cells that translates blood perfusion and mechanotransduction into organ growth and maintenance. In mouse and human liver models, blood vessel perfusion and mechanical stretching release angiocrine signals from endothelial cells that lead to hepatocyte survival and liver growth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836
Volume :
562
Issue :
7725
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
132140246
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-018-0522-3