Cell-autonomous decrease in proliferative competitiveness of the aged hepatocyte
- PMID: 25617502
- DOI: 10.1016/j.jhep.2015.01.015
Cell-autonomous decrease in proliferative competitiveness of the aged hepatocyte
Abstract
Background & aims: The regenerative potential of the liver declines with age, this might be dependent on a decrease in the intensity of the stimulus and/or an increased refractoriness of the target. In the present study, we compared the in vivo growth capacity of young and old hepatocytes transplanted into the same host.
Methods: We utilized the retrorsine (RS)-based model for liver repopulation, which provides a specific and effective stimulus for transplanted hepatocytes. Rats of the dipeptidyl-peptidase type IV (DPP-IV)-deficient strain were given RS and were injected with a mix of hepatocytes isolated from either a 2-month old or an 18-month old donor. To follow the fate of transplanted cells, they were each identified through a specific tag: young hepatocytes expressed the green fluorescent protein (GFP(+)), while those from old donors were DPP-IV-positive.
Results: At 1 month post-transplantation, DPP-IV-positive clusters (derived from old donor) were consistently smaller than those GFP(+) (young donor); the cross sectional area of clusters was decreased by 50%, while the mean volume was reduced to 1/3. Furthermore, when 2/3 partial hepatectomy (PH) was performed, the S-phase response of old hepatocyte-derived clusters was only 30-40% compared to that observed in cluster originating from young hepatocytes. No markers of cell senescence were expressed in clusters of transplanted hepatocytes.
Conclusions: This is the first direct evidence in vivo that hepatocytes in the aged liver express a cell-autonomous decline in their replicative capacity and in their regenerative response to PH compared to those from a young animal.
Keywords: Aging; Cell competition; Hepatocyte transplantation; Liver regeneration; Retrorsine.
Copyright © 2015 European Association for the Study of the Liver. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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