Vascularization of neonatal liver lobules presages adult liver size
D. Berfin Azizoglu, Karina Perez, Sherry Li Zheng, Shahadat Rahman, Ellen Youngsoo Rim, Teni Anbarchian, Matt Fish, Kyle M. Loh, Kristy Red-Horse, Roel Nusse

TL;DR
The study shows that neonatal liver vascularization predicts adult liver size in mice.
Contribution
A short-lived vascular endothelial progenitor pool is identified as critical for liver size control during postnatal growth.
Findings
Neonatal liver lobule vascularization predicts adult liver size.
Wnt signaling in mesothelium and venous angiogenesis are essential for proper liver growth.
Vein sprouting declines rapidly after birth, preceding hepatocyte division cessation.
Abstract
Organs vary in size between and within species to match organismal needs. Theoretical work has proposed that scaling of organs and body parts relies on energy-transport systems, the vascular system in mammals. Here, we use quantitative clonal mapping and volumetric imaging combined with novel molecular and genetic tools to identify temporal and spatial constraints that establish mouse liver size. We find that adult liver size is foreshadowed during a neonatal period when functional units, termed lobules, initiate growth. Nascent lobules are vascularized by prominent sprouting angiogenesis of the hepatic vein, restricted to the periphery of the organ. When Wnt signals are ablated in the single cell-layered mesothelium at the periphery, neonatal growth is disturbed, and the liver adopts a compromised size set point. Similarly, when venous angiogenesis is inhibited, nascent lobules remain…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLiver physiology and pathology · Organ Transplantation Techniques and Outcomes · Genetic and Kidney Cyst Diseases
