Multigenerational epigenetic adaptation of the hepatic wound-healing response
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Open Access
- 2 September 2012
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature Medicine
- Vol. 18 (9), 1369-1377
- https://doi.org/10.1038/nm.2893
Abstract
Derek Mann and his colleagues have found that experimental induction of liver fibrosis in male rats results in an epigenetic modification of the chromatin in their sperm such that their offspring have a more mild wound-healing response to hepatic fibrogenic insults. The mechanism responsible for this phenomenon is not clear, but it seems to involve a yet unidentified soluble factor released by myofibroblasts that act on either the germ cells or mature sperm. We investigated whether ancestral liver damage leads to heritable reprogramming of hepatic wound healing in male rats. We found that a history of liver damage corresponds with transmission of an epigenetic suppressive adaptation of the fibrogenic component of wound healing to the male F1 and F2 generations. Underlying this adaptation was less generation of liver myofibroblasts, higher hepatic expression of the antifibrogenic factor peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ (PPAR-γ) and lower expression of the profibrogenic factor transforming growth factor β1 (TGF-β1) compared to rats without this adaptation. Remodeling of DNA methylation and histone acetylation underpinned these alterations in gene expression. Sperm from rats with liver fibrosis were enriched for the histone variant H2A.Z and trimethylation of histone H3 at Lys27 (H3K27me3) at PPAR-γ chromatin. These modifications to the sperm chromatin were transmittable by adaptive serum transfer from fibrotic rats to naive rats and similar modifications were induced in mesenchymal stem cells exposed to conditioned media from cultured rat or human myofibroblasts. Thus, it is probable that a myofibroblast-secreted soluble factor stimulates heritable epigenetic signatures in sperm so that the resulting offspring better adapt to future fibrogenic hepatic insults. Adding possible relevance to humans, we found that people with mild liver fibrosis have hypomethylation of the PPARG promoter compared to others with severe fibrosis.Keywords
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