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Publication : Centriole signaling restricts hepatocyte ploidy to maintain liver integrity.

First Author  Sladky VC Year  2022
Journal  Genes Dev Volume  36
Issue  13-14 Pages  843-56
PubMed ID  35981754 Mgi Jnum  J:332592
Mgi Id  MGI:7424761 Doi  10.1101/gad.349727.122
Citation  Sladky VC, et al. (2022) Centriole signaling restricts hepatocyte ploidy to maintain liver integrity. Genes Dev 36(13-14):843-56
abstractText  Hepatocyte polyploidization is a tightly controlled process that is initiated at weaning and increases with age. The proliferation of polyploid hepatocytes in vivo is restricted by the PIDDosome-P53 axis, but how this pathway is triggered remains unclear. Given that increased hepatocyte ploidy protects against malignant transformation, the evolutionary driver that sets the upper limit for hepatocyte ploidy remains unknown. Here we show that hepatocytes accumulate centrioles during cycles of polyploidization in vivo. The presence of excess mature centrioles containing ANKRD26 was required to activate the PIDDosome in polyploid cells. As a result, mice lacking centrioles in the liver or ANKRD26 exhibited increased hepatocyte ploidy. Under normal homeostatic conditions, this increase in liver ploidy did not impact organ function. However, in response to chronic liver injury, blocking centriole-mediated ploidy control leads to a massive increase in hepatocyte polyploidization, severe liver damage, and impaired liver function. These results show that hyperpolyploidization sensitizes the liver to injury, posing a trade-off for the cancer-protective effect of increased hepatocyte ploidy. Our results may have important implications for unscheduled polyploidization that frequently occurs in human patients with chronic liver disease.
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