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Originally published as MBC in Press, 10.1091/mbc.E08-02-0177 on March 18, 2009

Vol. 20, Issue 9, 2486-2494, May 1, 2009

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Liver Progenitor Cells Fold Up a Cell Monolayer into a Double-layered Structure during Tubular Morphogenesis

Naoki Tanimizu*,{dagger}, Atsushi Miyajima{dagger}, and Keith E. Mostov*

*Departments of Anatomy, and Biochemistry and Biophysics, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA 94143-2140; and {dagger}Institute of Molecular and Cellular Biosciences, The University of Tokyo, Tokyo 113-0032, Japan

Submitted February 19, 2008; Revised February 27, 2009; Accepted March 3, 2009
Monitoring Editor: Asma Nusrat

Bile ducts are hepatic tubular structures that are lined by cholangiocytes, a type of liver epithelial cell. Cholangiocytes first form a single layer of cells, termed the ductal plate, surrounding the portal vein, which eventually remodels into the branching tubular network of bile ducts. The process of bile duct morphogenesis is not yet clear: a conventional model where cholangiocytes proliferate to duplicate a single layer of the ductal plate before lumen formation seems inconsistent with the observation that proliferation is dramatically reduced when hepatoblasts, liver progenitor cells, differentiate into cholangiocytes. Here, we developed a new culture system in which a liver progenitor cell line, HPPL, reorganizes from a monolayer to tubular structures in response to being overlaid with a gel containing type I collagen and Matrigel. We found that some of the HPPL in the monolayer depolarized and migrated to fold up the monolayer into a double-cell layer. These morphogenetic processes occurred without cell proliferation and required phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase and Akt activity. Later in morphogenesis, luminal space was generated between the two cell layers. This process, in particular enlargement of the apical lumen, involved transcriptional activity of HNF1β. Thus, using this sandwich culture system, we could segregate tubulogenesis of bile ducts into distinct steps and found that the PI3K/Akt pathway and HNF1β regulated different steps of the morphogenesis. Although the process of tubulogenesis in culture specifically resembled early bile duct formation, involvement of these two key players suggests that the sandwich culture might help us to find common principles of tubulogenesis in general.


This was published online ahead of print in MBC in Press (http://www.molbiolcell.org/cgi/doi/10.1091/mbc.E08-02-0177) on March 18, 2009.

Address correspondence to: Keith E. Mostov (keith.mostov{at}ucsf.edu)







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