ABSTRACT
Hepatic progenitor cells are immature epithelial cells that reside in the smallest
ramifications of the biliary tree in human liver. These cells are capable of differentiating
toward the biliary and the hepatocytic lineages and represent the human counterpart
of the oval cells in murine liver. An increased number of progenitor cells (referred
to as “activation”) and differentiation of the same toward hepatocytes or bile duct
epithelial cells, or both, is a component of virtually all human liver diseases. The
extent of progenitor cell activation and the direction of differentiation are correlated
with the severity of the disease and the type of mature epithelial cell (hepatocyte
or bile duct epithelial cell), respectively, that is damaged. Analogous to findings
in animal models of hepatocarcinogenesis, human hepatic progenitor cells most likely
can give rise to hepatocellular carcinoma. The factors that govern human hepatic progenitor
cell activation and differentiation are beginning to be identified.
KEYWORDS
Hepatic progenitor cells - oval cells - human liver diseases - progenitor cell activation
and differentiation - hepatocarcinogenesis