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Acute liver failure is regulated by MYC- and microbiome-dependent programs.

Aleksandra A KolodziejczykSara FedericiNiv ZmoraGayatree MohapatraMally Dori-BachashShanni HornsteinAvner LeshemDebby ReuveniEhud ZigmondAna TobarTomer Meir SalameAlon HarmelinAmir ShlomaiHagit ShapiroBjørt K KragesteenEran Elinav
Published in: Nature medicine (2020)
Acute liver failure (ALF) is a fulminant complication of multiple etiologies, characterized by rapid hepatic destruction, multi-organ failure and mortality. ALF treatment is mainly limited to supportive care and liver transplantation. Here we utilize the acetaminophen (APAP) and thioacetamide (TAA) ALF models in characterizing 56,527 single-cell transcriptomes to define the mouse ALF cellular atlas. We demonstrate that unique, previously uncharacterized stellate cell, endothelial cell, Kupffer cell, monocyte and neutrophil subsets, and their intricate intercellular crosstalk, drive ALF. We unravel a common MYC-dependent transcriptional program orchestrating stellate, endothelial and Kupffer cell activation during ALF, which is regulated by the gut microbiome through Toll-like receptor (TLR) signaling. Pharmacological inhibition of MYC, upstream TLR signaling checkpoints or microbiome depletion suppress this cell-specific, MYC-dependent program, thereby attenuating ALF. In humans, we demonstrate upregulated hepatic MYC expression in ALF transplant recipients compared to healthy donors. Collectively we demonstrate that detailed cellular/genetic decoding may enable pathway-specific ALF therapeutic intervention.
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