Monocyte-derived macrophages orchestrate multiple cell-type interactions to repair necrotic liver lesions in disease models

Dechun Feng(National Institutes of Health), Xiaogang Xiang(National Institutes of Health), Yukun Guan(National Institutes of Health), Adrien Guillot(National Institutes of Health), Hongkun Lu(National Institutes of Health), Ching-Wen Chang(Genesis Foundation), Yong He(National Institutes of Health), Hua Wang(National Institutes of Health), Hongna Pan(National Institutes of Health), Cynthia Ju(The University of Texas Health Science Center), Sean P. Colgan(University of Colorado Health), Frank Tacke(Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin), Xin Wei Wang(Genesis Foundation), George Kunos(National Institutes of Health), Bin Gao(National Institutes of Health)
Journal of Clinical Investigation
June 20, 2023
Cited by 91Open Access
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Abstract

The liver can fully regenerate after partial resection, and its underlying mechanisms have been extensively studied. The liver can also rapidly regenerate after injury, with most studies focusing on hepatocyte proliferation; however, how hepatic necrotic lesions during acute or chronic liver diseases are eliminated and repaired remains obscure. Here, we demonstrate that monocyte-derived macrophages (MoMFs) were rapidly recruited to and encapsulated necrotic areas during immune-mediated liver injury and that this feature was essential in repairing necrotic lesions. At the early stage of injury, infiltrating MoMFs activated the Jagged1/notch homolog protein 2 (JAG1/NOTCH2) axis to induce cell death-resistant SRY-box transcription factor 9+ (SOX9+) hepatocytes near the necrotic lesions, which acted as a barrier from further injury. Subsequently, necrotic environment (hypoxia and dead cells) induced a cluster of complement 1q-positive (C1q+) MoMFs that promoted necrotic removal and liver repair, while Pdgfb+ MoMFs activated hepatic stellate cells (HSCs) to express α-smooth muscle actin and induce a strong contraction signal (YAP, pMLC) to squeeze and finally eliminate the necrotic lesions. In conclusion, MoMFs play a key role in repairing the necrotic lesions, not only by removing necrotic tissues, but also by inducing cell death-resistant hepatocytes to form a perinecrotic capsule and by activating α-smooth muscle actin-expressing HSCs to facilitate necrotic lesion resolution.


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