Gastro Hep Advances (Jan 2023)

Cellular and Transcriptional Heterogeneity in the Intrahepatic Biliary Epithelium

  • Hannah R. Hrncir,
  • Adam D. Gracz

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 1
pp. 108 – 120

Abstract

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Epithelial tissues comprise heterogeneous cellular subpopulations, which often compartmentalize specialized functions such as absorption and secretion to distinct cell types. In the liver, hepatocytes and biliary epithelial cells (BECs; also called cholangiocytes) are the 2 major epithelial lineages and play distinct roles in (1) metabolism, protein synthesis, detoxification; and (2) bile transport and modification, respectively. Recent technological advances, including single-cell transcriptomic assays, have shed new light on well-established heterogeneity among hepatocytes, endothelial cells, and immune cells in the liver. However, a “ground truth” understanding of molecular heterogeneity in BECs has remained elusive, and the field currently lacks a set of consensus biomarkers for identifying BEC subpopulations. Here, we review long-standing definitions of BEC heterogeneity as well as emerging studies that aim to characterize BEC subpopulations using next-generation single-cell assays. Understanding cellular heterogeneity in the intrahepatic bile ducts holds promise for expanding our foundational mechanistic knowledge of BECs during homeostasis and disease.

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