Examining the gut-liver axis in liver cancer using organoid models.

2021 
Abstract The World Health Organization predicts that by 2030 liver cancer will cause 1 million deaths annually, thus becoming the third most lethal cancer worldwide. Hepatocellular carcinoma and cholangiocarcinoma are the two major primary cancer subtypes involving the liver. Both are often diagnosed late, and hence response to treatment and survival are poor. It is therefore of utmost importance to understand the mechanisms by which liver cancers initiate and progress. The causes of primary liver cancer are diverse, resulting primarily from obesity, chronic alcohol abuse or viral hepatitis. Importantly, both alcohol and high fat diet can promote intestinal permeability, enabling microbial translocation from the gut into the liver. As a result, these microbial antigens and metabolites exacerbate hepatic inflammation and fibrosis, increasing the risk of primary liver cancer. Organoids are primary, three-dimensional, stem cell derived liver models that can recapitulate many of the disease phenotypes observed in vivo. This review aims to summarize the advantages of organoid culture to examine the gut-liver axis with respect to cancer initiation and progression. In particular, the use of gut and liver organoid mono- and co-cultures together and with immune cell populations to best recapitulate disease mechanisms and develop therapeutic interventions.
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