Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5534881 | Seminars in Cell & Developmental Biology | 2017 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Liver development proceeds by sequential steps during which gene regulatory networks (GRNs) determine differentiation and maturation of hepatic cells. Characterizing the architecture and dynamics of these networks is essential for understanding how cell fate decisions are made during development, and for recapitulating these processes during in vitro production of liver cells for toxicology studies, disease modelling and regenerative therapy. Here we review the GRNs that control key steps of liver development and lead to differentiation of hepatocytes and cholangiocytes in mammals. We focus on GRNs determining cell fate decisions and analyse subcircuitry motifs that may confer specific dynamic properties to the networks. Finally, we put our analysis in the perspective of recent attempts to directly reprogram cells to hepatocytes by forced expression of transcription factors.
Keywords
TGFβ type II receptorCholangiocyteTBX3CDX2TβRIIWntTGFPROX1hepatoblastOC2FGFprospero homeobox 1caudal type homeobox 2C/EBPHnfSOxYAPtransforming growth factorLiver developmentembryonic stemGene regulatory networkTranscription factorhepatocyte nuclear factorfibroblast growth factorFoxaBMPHepatocyteCCAAT/enhancer binding proteinyes-associated proteinbone morphogenic proteinNetwork dynamicsGRN
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Authors
Claude Gérard, Janne Tys, Frédéric P. Lemaigre,