Paper Talk

370-Metabolic Stress Priming in Hepatocarcinogenesis


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This research explores how long-term metabolic stress transforms the liver, focusing on the cellular shift from healthy function to chronic disease and cancer. By utilizing multi-omic technologies and spatial transcriptomics in both mice and humans, the authors identify specific gene programs that regulate hepatocyte behavior during the progression of MASLD and cirrhosis. The study introduces MATCHA, a computational tool designed to uncover the transcription factors, such as RELB and SOX4, that drive these pathological changes. These molecular regulators are found to increase cellular proliferation and trigger a state of dedifferentiation that primes the liver for tumorigenesis. Ultimately, the findings highlight how intercellular signaling and genetic adaptations create a high-risk environment for the development of hepatocellular carcinoma.

References:

  • Tzouanas C N, Shay J E S, Sherman M S, et al. Hepatic adaptation to chronic metabolic stress primes tumorigenesis[J]. Cell, 2025.
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Paper TalkBy 淼淼Elva