Deficiency in Mice Enhances Regeneration in Healthy Liver but Drives Pathological Repair and Functional Decline in Fibrotic Liver.
MicroRNA-122 (miR-122) is the most abundant hepatic microRNA and a key regulator of hepatocyte proliferation, metabolism and differentiation.
APA
Ribera J, Cardona-Simó A, et al. (2026). Deficiency in Mice Enhances Regeneration in Healthy Liver but Drives Pathological Repair and Functional Decline in Fibrotic Liver.. International journal of molecular sciences, 27(7). https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms27073149
MLA
Ribera J, et al.. " Deficiency in Mice Enhances Regeneration in Healthy Liver but Drives Pathological Repair and Functional Decline in Fibrotic Liver.." International journal of molecular sciences, vol. 27, no. 7, 2026.
PMID
41977335
Abstract
MicroRNA-122 (miR-122) is the most abundant hepatic microRNA and a key regulator of hepatocyte proliferation, metabolism and differentiation. Although widely studied in hepatocellular carcinoma, its role in liver regeneration remains unexplored. This study investigated how miR-122 deficiency modulates liver regeneration under physiological conditions and during chronic liver injury. A miR-122-deficient mouse model () was generated using CRISPR/Cas9, and liver regeneration was assessed after two-thirds partial hepatectomy (PHx) in healthy and CCl-induced fibrotic livers. In healthy liver, miR-122 expression was transiently downregulated within 24 h after PHx, suggesting a physiological role in cell cycle entry. After PHx in non-fibrotic livers, mice showed increased basal proliferation and accelerated regeneration, associated with Cyclin D1 and RhoA overexpression, enhanced cytokinesis and a predominance of diploid hepatocytes. In contrast, miR-122 deficiency markedly exacerbated CCl-induced fibrosis, leading to cirrhosis-like architecture, impaired hepatocyte function, and severe metabolic dysregulation. Despite increased proliferation after PHx, fibrotic mice exhibited severely impaired regeneration and near-complete mortality. Proteomic analyses revealed metabolic failure, oxidative stress, and inflammatory activation, creating an unfavorable environment for tissue repair. In conclusion, miR-122 plays a dual role in liver regeneration. While its suppression enhances regeneration in healthy liver, loss of miR-122 under fibrotic conditions drives pathological repair, metabolic failure and lethality, highlighting its critical role in chronic liver disease.
MeSH Terms
Animals; MicroRNAs; Liver Regeneration; Mice; Liver Cirrhosis; Hepatocytes; Cell Proliferation; Liver; Mice, Knockout; Carbon Tetrachloride; Male; Hepatectomy; Mice, Inbred C57BL; Disease Models, Animal