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Hepatocyte regeneration is driven by embryo-like DNA methylation reprogramming.

Tal Falick MichaeliOfra SabagBatia AzriaRimma FokNathalie AbudiRinat AbramovitchJonathan MoninYuval GielchinskyHoward CedarYehudit Bergman
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2024)
As a result of partial hepatectomy, the remaining liver tissue undergoes a process of renewed proliferation that leads to rapid regeneration of the liver. By following the early stages of this process, we observed dramatic programmed changes in the DNA methylation profile, characterized by both de novo and demethylation events, with a subsequent return to the original adult pattern as the liver matures. Strikingly, these transient alterations partially mimic the DNA methylation state of embryonic hepatoblasts (E16.5), indicating that hepatocytes actually undergo epigenetic dedifferentiation. Furthermore, Tet2/Tet3-deletion experiments demonstrated that these changes in methylation are necessary for carrying out basic embryonic functions, such as proliferation, a key step in liver regeneration. This implies that unlike tissue-specific regulatory regions that remain demethylated in the adult, early embryonic genes are programmed to first undergo demethylation, followed by remethylation as development proceeds. The identification of this built-in system may open targeting opportunities for regenerative medicine.
Keyphrases
  • dna methylation
  • genome wide
  • stem cells
  • gene expression
  • signaling pathway
  • transcription factor
  • liver injury
  • pregnant women
  • wound healing
  • drug delivery
  • drug induced
  • sensitive detection
  • pregnancy outcomes