Annals of Hepatology (Dec 2021)

Mechanism of cholangiocellular damage and repair during cholestasis

  • Soraya Salas-Silva,
  • Arturo Simoni-Nieves,
  • Lisette Chávez-Rodríguez,
  • María Concepción Gutiérrez-Ruiz,
  • Leticia Bucio,
  • Luis E. Gomez Quiroz

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26
p. 100530

Abstract

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The mechanism of damage of the biliary epithelium remains partially unexplored. However, recently many works have offered new evidence regarding the cholangiocytes' damage process, which is the main target in a broad spectrum of pathologies ranging from acute cholestasis, cholangiopathies to cholangiocarcinoma. This is encouraging since some works addressed this epithelium's relevance in health and disease until a few years ago. The biliary tree in the liver, comprised of cholangiocytes, is a pipeline for bile flow and regulates key hepatic processes such as proliferation, regeneration, immune response, and signaling. This review aimed to compile the most recent advances on the mechanisms of cholangiocellular damage during cholestasis, which, although it is present in many cholangiopathies, is not necessarily a common or conserved process in all of them, having a relevant role cAMP and PKA during obstructive cholestasis, as well as Ca2+-dependent PKC in functional cholestasis. Cholangiocellular damage could vary according to the type of cholestasis, the aggressor, or the bile ducts' location where it develops and what kind of damage can favor cholangiocellular carcinoma development.

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