LIFR regulates cholesterol-driven bidirectional hepatocyte-neutrophil cross-talk to promote liver regeneration.
Yalan DengZilong ZhaoMarisela SheldonYang ZhaoHongqi TengConsuelo MartinezJie ZhangChunru LinYutong SunFan YaoMichael A CurranHao ZhuLi MaPublished in: Nature metabolism (2024)
Liver regeneration is under metabolic and immune regulation. Despite increasing recognition of the involvement of neutrophils in regeneration, it is unclear how the liver signals to the bone marrow to release neutrophils after injury and how reparative neutrophils signal to hepatocytes to reenter the cell cycle. Here we report that loss of the liver tumour suppressor Lifr in mouse hepatocytes impairs, whereas overexpression of leukaemia inhibitory factor receptor (LIFR) promotes liver repair and regeneration after partial hepatectomy or toxic injury. In response to physical or chemical damage to the liver, LIFR from hepatocytes promotes the secretion of cholesterol and CXCL1 in a STAT3-dependent manner, leading to the efflux of bone marrow neutrophils to the circulation and damaged liver. Cholesterol, via its receptor ERRα, stimulates neutrophils to secrete hepatocyte growth factor to accelerate hepatocyte proliferation. Altogether, our findings reveal a LIFR-STAT3-CXCL1-CXCR2 axis and a LIFR-STAT3-cholesterol-ERRα-hepatocyte growth factor axis that form bidirectional hepatocyte-neutrophil cross-talk to repair and regenerate the liver.