Liver Sinusoidal Endothelial Cells Contribute to Portal Hypertension Through Collagen Type IV-Driven Sinusoidal Remodeling

JCI Insight. 2024 May 7:e174775. doi: 10.1172/jci.insight.174775. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Portal hypertension (PHTN) is a severe complication of liver cirrhosis and is associated with intrahepatic sinusoidal remodeling induced by sinusoidal resistance and angiogenesis. Collagen type IV (COL4), a major component of basement membrane, forms in liver sinusoids upon chronic liver injury. However, the role, the cellular source and expression regulation of COL4 in liver diseases is unknown. Here, we examined how COL4 is produced and how it regulates sinusoidal remodeling in fibrosis and PHTN. Human cirrhotic liver sample RNA-sequencing showed increased COL4 expression, which was further confirmed via immunofluorescence staining. scRNA-sequencing identified liver sinusoidal endothelial cells (LSECs) as the predominant source of COL4 upregulation in mouse fibrotic liver. In addition, COL4 was upregulated in a tumor necrosis factor α-nuclear factor-κB dependent manner through an epigenetic mechanism in liver sinusoidal endothelial cells in vitro. Indeed, by utilizing a CRISPRi-dCas9-KRAB-mediated epigenome editing approach, epigenetic repression of the enhancer-promoter interaction showed silencing of COL4 gene expression. LSEC-specific COL4 gene mutation or repression in vivo abrogated sinusoidal resistance and angiogenesis, which thereby alleviated sinusoidal remodeling and PHTN. Our findings reveal that LSECs promote sinusoidal remodeling and PHTN during liver fibrosis through COL4 deposition.

Keywords: Cell biology; Collagens; Endothelial cells; Hepatology.