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The RSPO-LGR4/5-ZNRF3/RNF43 module controls liver zonation and size.

Lara Planas-PazVanessa OrsiniLuke BoulterDiego CalabreseMonika PikiolekFlorian NigschYang XieGuglielmo RomaAdriana DonovanPatricia MartiNicolau BeckmannMichael T DillWalter CarboneSebastian BerglingAndrea IskenMatthias MuellerBernd KinzelYi YangXiaohong MaoThomas B NicholsonRaffaella ZamponiPaola CapodieciReginald ValdezDaniel RiveraAndreas LoewChinweike UkomaduLuigi M TerraccianoTewis BouwmeesterFeng CongMarkus H HeimStuart J ForbesHeinz RuffnerJan S Tchorz
Published in: Nature cell biology (2016)
LGR4/5 receptors and their cognate RSPO ligands potentiate Wnt/β-catenin signalling and promote proliferation and tissue homeostasis in epithelial stem cell compartments. In the liver, metabolic zonation requires a Wnt/β-catenin signalling gradient, but the instructive mechanism controlling its spatiotemporal regulation is not known. We have now identified the RSPO-LGR4/5-ZNRF3/RNF43 module as a master regulator of Wnt/β-catenin-mediated metabolic liver zonation. Liver-specific LGR4/5 loss of function (LOF) or RSPO blockade disrupted hepatic Wnt/β-catenin signalling and zonation. Conversely, pathway activation in ZNRF3/RNF43 LOF mice or with recombinant RSPO1 protein expanded the hepatic Wnt/β-catenin signalling gradient in a reversible and LGR4/5-dependent manner. Recombinant RSPO1 protein increased liver size and improved liver regeneration, whereas LGR4/5 LOF caused the opposite effects, resulting in hypoplastic livers. Furthermore, we show that LGR4(+) hepatocytes throughout the lobule contribute to liver homeostasis without zonal dominance. Taken together, our results indicate that the RSPO-LGR4/5-ZNRF3/RNF43 module controls metabolic liver zonation and is a hepatic growth/size rheostat during development, homeostasis and regeneration.
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