TY - JOUR
T1 - KANSL3 directs transcriptional programs essential for hepatic metabolism and differentiation
AU - Wiese, Meike
AU - Pessoa Rodrigues, Cecilia
AU - Akbas, Mehmet Eray
AU - Sun, Yidan
AU - Holz, Herbert
AU - Martinez Greene, Juan Alfonso
AU - Tsang, Tsz Hong
AU - Bella, Chiara
AU - Ganter, Kerstin
AU - Stehle, Thomas
AU - Shvedunova, Maria
AU - Akhtar, Asifa
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Wiese et al.
PY - 2025/12
Y1 - 2025/12
N2 - Liver disease is a leading cause of mortality worldwide. Emerging evidence highlights the significant role of epigenetic regulation in sustaining liver homeostasis, providing new therapeutic strategies for liver disease. Hepatocyte-specific deletion of the epigenetic regulator KANSL3, a key component of the NSL complex, results in early-onset liver disease marked by biliary hyperplasia and hepatic fibrosis. KANSL3 is essential for regulating hepatocyte transcriptional networks important for hepatic steroid and lipid metabolism through histone acetylation. Moreover, single-cell RNA sequencing demonstrated that the loss of KANSL3 disrupts the differentiation of hepatocytes in vivo. The transcriptional programs necessary for hepatocyte differentiation of ductal and fetal liver organoids were severely compromised in the absence of KANSL3. These findings collectively demonstrate a crucial role of the epigenetic regulator KANSL3 in hepatocyte differentiation in liver development and disease.
AB - Liver disease is a leading cause of mortality worldwide. Emerging evidence highlights the significant role of epigenetic regulation in sustaining liver homeostasis, providing new therapeutic strategies for liver disease. Hepatocyte-specific deletion of the epigenetic regulator KANSL3, a key component of the NSL complex, results in early-onset liver disease marked by biliary hyperplasia and hepatic fibrosis. KANSL3 is essential for regulating hepatocyte transcriptional networks important for hepatic steroid and lipid metabolism through histone acetylation. Moreover, single-cell RNA sequencing demonstrated that the loss of KANSL3 disrupts the differentiation of hepatocytes in vivo. The transcriptional programs necessary for hepatocyte differentiation of ductal and fetal liver organoids were severely compromised in the absence of KANSL3. These findings collectively demonstrate a crucial role of the epigenetic regulator KANSL3 in hepatocyte differentiation in liver development and disease.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105017791457
U2 - 10.26508/lsa.202503238
DO - 10.26508/lsa.202503238
M3 - Article
C2 - 41044006
AN - SCOPUS:105017791457
SN - 2575-1077
VL - 8
JO - Life Science Alliance
JF - Life Science Alliance
IS - 12
M1 - e202503238
ER -