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Autoimmune Liver Disease


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circulation six to eight times a day and are highly efficiently conserved. BAs that escape ileal reabsorption reach the colon, where they are deconjugated and metabolized (e.g. dehydroxylated) by gut microbiota to secondary BAs, which can still be passively absorbed as unconjugated BAs in the colon. Unconjugated BAs are partially reconjugated (and rehydroxylated) during their passage through the liver before being excreted into bile again, which completes their enterohepatic cycle. In addition, BAs are filtered by the glomeruli and then reabsorbed in renal tubules, again limiting their renal loss.

      BAs may also cycle between cholangiocytes and hepatocytes through a cholehepatic shunt pathway. Unconjugated BAs induce a greater degree of bile flow per BA molecule excreted in bile. To account for this hypercholeretic effect, it was proposed that unconjugated BAs may be passively absorbed by bile ducts, enter the peribiliary plexus adjacent to intrahepatic bile ducts, and then forwarded to the hepatic sinusoids to be returned to cholangiocytes by hepatocyte secretion. Cholehepatic shunting initiated by passive absorption of non‐ionized bile salt results in the generation of HCO3‐rich hypercholeresis [4,5].

Schematic illustration of the process of enterohepatic circulation of bile acids.

      Source: Trauner et al. [5]. Reproduced with permission of John Wiley and Sons.

       Cell Death

       Liver Regeneration

Schematic illustration of the stem or progenitor cell niches in the human biliary tree in which the canals of Hering harbor hepatic stem or progenitor cells, while peribiliary glands constitute the niche for biliary tree stem or progenitor cells.

      Source: Overi et al. [6].

      BECs are usually quiescent, but following a liver insult they activate and/or proliferate. A typical element of the repair response to liver damage is the ductular reaction (DR), a stereotyped histopathologic lesion of the biliary epithelium that plays a fundamental role in the progression of hepatic fibrosis. The DR is characterized by a marked proliferation of cholangiocytes, leading to formation of reactive ductular cells (RDCs), with poor cytoplasm and arranged in cell cords without a lumen or in richly anastomosed small‐diameter ducts (<10 μm) with almost unrecognizable lumens. RDCs are activated epithelial cells that secrete a vast array of factors, including cytokines, chemokines, growth factors, and angiogenic factors. They may derive from hepatocytes undergoing a process of ductular metaplasia, or from activation of the hepatic progenitor cell compartment and/or from proliferation and dedifferentiation of preexisting cholangiocytes. The increase in RDCs is generally associated with a significant increase in inflammatory infiltrate and portal fibrosis.

      RDCs are considered the major driver of portal fibrosis during parenchymal and/or biliary injury. The deposition of