PIEZO1 channel mechanosensing in hepatobiliary physiology and disease. [Review]

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All Authors

Konstantinou, C.
Patel, SK.
Lalor, P.
Moore, JB.
Roberts, LD.
Endesh, N.
Wah, TM.
Samson, A.
Hakeem, AR.
Prasad, KR.

LTHT Author

Konstantinou, Charalampos
Patel, Shaili

LTHT Department

Abdominal Medicine & Surgery
Hepatology
Liver Unit
General Surgery

Non Medic

Publication Date

2025

Item Type

Journal Article
Review

Language

Subject

Subject Headings

Abstract

The hepatobiliary system is constantly exposed to dynamic mechanical forces, including fluid shear stress, bile canaliculi pressure, and extracellular matrix stiffness. While traditionally studied for its metabolic and detoxifying functions, it is now increasingly recognised as a mechanosensitive organ. This review focuses on PIEZO1 mechanically gated ion channels that transduce physical cues into calcium-dependent signalling events. PIEZO2, the only other PIEZO isoform, is not known to be relevant in the hepatobiliary system. We examine the current knowledge on PIEZO1 in liver physiology, highlighting its roles in liver sinusoidal endothelial cells, hepatocytes, and macrophages. In health, PIEZO1 regulates key processes such as bile acid synthesis (via nitric oxide-mediated suppression of CYP7A1), bile flow, antioxidant defence, and iron homeostasis. In disease, PIEZO1 activity is linked to pathological processes such as inflammation, fibrosis and angiogenesis in the context of cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. We discuss the idea that the liver alternates between two functional states depending on portal vein flow: a high-flow state favouring detoxification and metabolism, and a low-flow state that prioritises bile acid production. Understanding how PIEZO1 contributes to these transitions offers new insights into liver's ability to adapt its function and metabolism. Further research on hepatobiliary PIEZO1 will advance the understanding of how physical exercise promotes health and opens new opportunities for enhancing liver regeneration after surgical resection and liver function in chronic diseases such as fibrosis and cirrhosis.

Journal

American Journal of Physiology - Cell Physiology