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Old 07-10-2019   #1173
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A human liver cell atlas

Scientists discover previously unknown subtypes of liver cells in health and disease

Max Planck Institute of Immunobiology and Epigenetics


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IMAGE: Single cells were isolated from liver tissue derived from 9 different patients to perform single-cell RNA-sequencing. After applying computational single-cell analysis methods, a human liver cell atlas, or cell type... view more 

Credit: MPI of Immunobiology and Epigenetics, Freiburg, Grün


The liver is one of the largest and most versatile organs of the human body. It turns sugars, proteins, and fats from our food into substances useful for the body and releases them to the cells. In addition to its role in human metabolism, the liver is an immunological organ, which is indispensable for detoxifying the blood. Most strikingly, the liver is the only internal organ that can regenerate back to its full size with only 25% of its original mass.

Liver diseases are one of the biggest health problems in the world and a leading cause of death. Only in Germany, at least five million patients are suffering from fatty liver disease, liver cancer, or hepatitis. Despite the immense importance of the liver for human health, the diversity of individual liver cell types and the associated molecular and cellular processes in both healthy and diseased tissue have not yet been fully investigated.

Scientists from the Max Planck Institute of Immunobiology and Epigenetics in Freiburg and colleagues from the University of Strasbourg are now presenting a comprehensive cell atlas of the human liver published in the science journal Nature. Using what is known as single-cell RNA sequencing, the researchers led by Max Planck Group Leader Dominic Grün and in cooperation with the Baumert Lab succeeded in creating a detailed map of the cell populations in the healthy human liver. Based on the analysis of 10000 cells from nine human donors, the cell atlas maps all important liver cell types, including hepatocytes, the major metabolic cells of the liver, endothelial cells lining the blood vessels, liver resident macrophages and other immune cell types, as well as bile duct cells and liver epithelial progenitors. With this data, it is possible to capture the diversity of cell types and cell states at an unprecedented resolution and to understand how they change during development or upon disease progression.

The cell's fingerprint

The researchers also discovered an astonishing diversity among individual cells of the alleged same cell type. They found new subtypes of hepatocytes, endothelial cells, and macrophages, which, although hardly different in their morphological appearance, have discrete gene expression profiles. These discoveries were made possible by the significant progress of experimental and computational single-cell analysis methods, which enable cells to be examined at high resolution.

In single-cell RNA sequencing, the organ tissue to be investigated is dissociated into individual cells; these cells are then isolated and sequenced separately. The sequencing is used to determine how many messenger RNA molecules (mRNA) of each gene are present in the cell. "The messenger RNA transmits the blueprints stored in the DNA to the protein factories. By measuring which RNA molecules are present in a cell at a certain point in time, we can identify which genes are active. This gives us a kind of fingerprint that provides us with a comprehensive insight into the very nature of each cell. This enables us to understand which functions the cell performs, how it is regulated and also what happens when diseases develop," explains Dominic Grün.

The data obtained in this way are not only extremely extensive, but also very complex since the RNA molecules of thousands of genes in thousands of cells have to be quantified and interpreted simultaneously. In recent years, Dominic Grün has developed tailor-made algorithms helping him and his team to characterize the different cell types and understand their developmental pathways.

Identifying progenitors of liver cells

Using such fingerprints of cells, the Freiburg researchers also identified previously unknown properties of a subpopulation of bile duct cells. Bile ducts run through the entire liver to transport bile to the gallbladder. "Our data show that cells within this rare subpopulation are precursor cells or progenitors. They are not only able to form organoids, which is a marked characteristic of stem cells, but also have the potential to develop into different cell types," explains Nadim Aizarani, the first author of the study. These progenitor cells either differentiate into hepatocytes or bile duct cells when cultivated in a culture medium. The Max Planck researchers are convinced that this precursor cell population plays an important role in liver regeneration and could also be involved in the development of liver diseases or tumors.
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