Volume 28, Issue 4 pp. 980-985
Original Article
Free Access

Immunolocalization of OV-6, a putative progenitor cell marker in human fetal and diseased pediatric liver

Heather A. Crosby Ph.D.

Corresponding Author

Heather A. Crosby Ph.D.

Departments of Biochemistry, University of Birmingham and Liver Units, Queen Elizabeth and Children's Hospital, Birmingham, UK

Liver Research Laboratories, Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Birmingham, B15 2TH, UK. Fax: 44-121-627-2497===Search for more papers by this author
Stefan G. Hubscher

Stefan G. Hubscher

Departments of Biochemistry, Pathology, University of Birmingham and Liver Units, Queen Elizabeth and Children's Hospital, Birmingham, UK

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Ruth E. Joplin

Ruth E. Joplin

Departments of Biochemistry, Medicine, University of Birmingham and Liver Units, Queen Elizabeth and Children's Hospital, Birmingham, UK

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Deirdre A. Kelly

Deirdre A. Kelly

Departments of Biochemistry, Child Health, University of Birmingham and Liver Units, Queen Elizabeth and Children's Hospital, Birmingham, UK

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Alastair J. Strain

Alastair J. Strain

Departments of Biochemistry, University of Birmingham and Liver Units, Queen Elizabeth and Children's Hospital, Birmingham, UK

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First published: 30 December 2003
Citations: 93

Abstract

The existence of progenitor (stem) cells in the human liver remains a matter of debate. In rodent models of hepatocarcinogenesis and injury, oval cells proliferate in the periportal regions of the portal tracts and are suggested to derive from a stem cell compartment, because they are capable of differentiating into hepatocytes or biliary epithelial cells. In this study, the rat oval cell marker, OV-6 has been used to investigate the hypothesis that there are stem cells present in fetal and pediatric human liver. The pattern of OV-6 expression was compared with the established adult biliary cell markers human epithelial antigen-125 (HEA-125) and cytokeratin-19 (CK-19). In normal pediatric liver (n = 7), bile ducts and ductules were immunostained with CK-19 and HEA-125, whereas OV-6 staining was consistently negative. In fetal tissue (n = 10), ductal plate cells, primitive bile ducts, and hepatoblasts were stained with CK-19 and HEA-125 although only some of the ductal plate cells and hepatoblasts were OV-6 positive. In biliary atresia (n = 6) and α1, anti-trypsin deficiency (α1,AT) (n = 4), CK-19 and HEA-125 immunostained ductular proliferative cells that tended to form finely anastomosing ductules, whereas OV-6 staining was found more on discrete cells confined to portal tract margins. Additionally, in diseased liver, OV-6 was strongly positive in hepatocyte lobules with greatest intensity in the periseptal regions. This widespread hepatocyte OV-6 positivity suggests that the antibody may identify cells of a less differentiated phenotype (transitional hepatocytes) that have replaced the mature cells. Therefore, it is proposed that in human liver, OV-6 is recognizing cells with a progenitor stem cell-like phenotype with the capacity to differentiate into OV-6 positive ductular cells or lobular hepatocytes.

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