[HTML][HTML] A narrative review of liver regeneration—from models to molecular basis

W Huang, N Han, L Du, M Wang, L Chen… - Annals of Translational …, 2021 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
W Huang, N Han, L Du, M Wang, L Chen, H Tang
Annals of Translational Medicine, 2021ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Objective To elucidate the characteristics of different liver regeneration animal models,
understand the activation signals and mechanisms related to liver regeneration, and obtain
a more comprehensive conception of the entire liver regeneration process. Background
Liver regeneration is one of the most enigmatic and fascinating phenomena of the human
organism. Despite suffering significant injuries, the liver still can continue to perform its
complex functions through the regeneration system. Although advanced topics on liver …
Abstract
Objective
To elucidate the characteristics of different liver regeneration animal models, understand the activation signals and mechanisms related to liver regeneration, and obtain a more comprehensive conception of the entire liver regeneration process.
Background
Liver regeneration is one of the most enigmatic and fascinating phenomena of the human organism. Despite suffering significant injuries, the liver still can continue to perform its complex functions through the regeneration system. Although advanced topics on liver regeneration have been proposed; unfortunately, complete regeneration of the liver has not been achieved until now. Therefore, increasing understanding of the liver regenerative process can help improve our treatment of liver failure. It will provide a new sight for the treatment of patients with liver injury in the clinic.
Methods
Literatures on liver regeneration animal models and involved basic research on molecular mechanisms were retrieved to analyze the characteristics of different models and those related to molecular basis.
Conclusions
The process of liver regeneration is complex and intricate, consisting of various and interactive pathways. There is sufficient evidence to demonstrate that liver regeneration is similar between humans and rodents. At the same time, many of the same cytokines, growth factors, and signaling pathways are relevant. There are many gaps in our current knowledge. Understanding of this knowledge will provide more supportive clinical treatment strategies, including small-scale liver transplantation and high-quality regenerative process after surgical resection, and offer possible targets to treat the dysregulation of regeneration that occurs in chronic hepatic diseases and tumors. Current research work, such as the use of animal models as in vivo vectors for high-quality human hepatocytes, represents a unique and significant cutting edge in the field of liver regeneration.
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