Liver epithelioid progenitor cells derived from fetal Luxi bovine alleviate liver fibrosis

Cytotechnology. 2018 Feb;70(1):129-140. doi: 10.1007/s10616-017-0113-4. Epub 2017 Jun 17.

Abstract

Liver epithelioid progenitor cells (LEPCs) have important roles in liver therapy because of their hepatic differentiation potency in vitro and in vivo. Despite many researches on humans, mice, and rats, equivalent progenitor cells derived from bovine are relatively rare. The purpose of our current study is to characterize bovine LEPCs, and research on the cure potency of this heteroplastic progenitor cells on mice liver fibrosis. We have used collagenase IV digesting and differential adhesion method to isolate slabstone shape, EpCAM, LGR5, NCAM1 and SOX9 positive progenitor cells from fetal Luxi bovine liver. When cultured in hepatic differentiation media containing 20 ng/ml Oncostatin M, LEPCs can differentiate into hepatocytes in vitro. After 4 weeks of intravenous tail vein injection into CCl4-injured mouse liver, LEPCs engrafted into liver parenchyma, differentiated into ALB positive hepatocytes, and could alleviate liver fibrosis through down regulating fibrosis genes-Tgfb1 and α-SMA as well as decreasing expression of collagen gene Col1a1, Col3a1, and Col4a1, and regain liver function by recovering ALT and AST. Our findings provided a useful tool for studying liver development in vitro, new cell resource for heterograft on mouse liver diseases, and a new platform for researches on immune rejection of heterogeneous cell transplantation.

Keywords: Hepatocyte differentiation; Heterogeneous cell transplantation; Liver epithelioid progenitor cells; Liver fibrosis; Stem cells therapy.