Primitive Hepatoblasts Driving Early Liver Development

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Abstract

The embryonic development of the liver is initiated by the emergence of hepatoblasts, originating from the ventral foregut endoderm adjacent to the heart. Here, we identify and characterize a previously unrecognized population of early hepatoblasts at the ventroposterior part of the emerging liver bud, traced from Cdx2 -positive endoderm progenitors, which we term primitive hepatoblasts. Mouse and human single-cell transcriptomics reveals the expression of both canonical hepatoblast markers TBX3 , FGB , and KRT8/18 and primitive-specific mesenchymal markers ID3 , VIM , and GATA4 . Lineage tracing revealed the notable contribution up to 12.6% of LIV2+ hepatoblasts at E11.5 but diminishes in late fetal and postnatal development. Epigenetic and functional perturbation studies further uncover that primitive hepatoblast emergence is primed by WNT-suppression on RA-permissive CDX2+FOXA2+ progenitors. Furthermore, human pluripotent stem cell-derived primitive hepatoblast-like cells secrete pleiotrophin and midkine to amplify hepatoblast populations and develop epithelial-mesenchymal hybrid tissues in vivo . Our results provide a new framework for understanding lineage heterogeneity during early hepatogenesis and offer revised insights into strategies to model normal and abnormal liver development.

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