Comparative Cytogenetics (Apr 2024)

The role of cellular polyploidy in the regeneration of the cirrhotic liver in rats and humans

  • Natalia N. Bezborodkina,
  • Vsevolod Ya. Brodsky,
  • Boris N. Kudryavtsev

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3897/compcytogen.18.121459
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18
pp. 51 – 57

Abstract

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Polyploidy is a condition in which a cell has multiple diploid sets of chromosomes. Two forms of polyploidy are known. One of them, generative polyploidy, is characteristic of all cells of the organism, while the other form develops only in some somatic tissues at certain stages of postnatal ontogenesis. Whole genome duplication has played a particularly important role in the evolution of plants and animals, while the role of cellular (somatic) polyploidy in organisms remains largely unclear. In this work we investigated the contribution of cellular polyploidy to the normal and the reparative liver growth of Rattus norvegicus (Berkenhout, 1769) and Homo sapiens Linnaeus, 1758. It is shown that polyploidy makes a significant contribution to the increase of the liver mass both in the course of normal postnatal development and during pathological process.