iScience (May 2021)

SAA1/TLR2 axis directs chemotactic migration of hepatic stellate cells responding to injury

  • Anteneh Getachew,
  • Nasir Abbas,
  • Kai You,
  • Zhen Yang,
  • Muzammal Hussain,
  • Xinping Huang,
  • Ziqi Cheng,
  • Shenglin Tan,
  • Jiawang Tao,
  • Xiaorui Yu,
  • Yan Chen,
  • Fan Yang,
  • Tingcai Pan,
  • Yingying Xu,
  • Guosheng Xu,
  • Yuanqi Zhuang,
  • FeiMa Wu,
  • Yinxiong Li

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 5
p. 102483

Abstract

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Summary: Hepatic stellate cells (HSCs) are crucial for liver injury repair and cirrhosis. However, the mechanism of chemotactic recruitment of HSCs into injury loci is still largely unknown. Here, we demonstrate that serum amyloid A1 (SAA1) acts as a chemokine recruiting HSCs toward injury loci signaling via TLR2, a finding proven by gene manipulation studies in cell and mice models. The mechanistic investigations revealed that SAA1/TLR2 axis stimulates the Rac GTPases through PI3K-dependent pathways and induces phosphorylation of MLC (pSer19). Genetic deletion of TLR2 and pharmacological inhibition of PI3K diminished the phosphorylation of MLCpSer19 and migration of HSCs. In brief, SAA1 serves as a hepatic endogenous chemokine for the TLR2 receptor on HSCs, thereby initiating PI3K-dependent signaling and its effector, Rac GTPases, which consequently regulates actin filament remodeling and cell directional migration. Our findings provide novel targets for anti-fibrosis drug development.

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