Jeremy Langdon asked the Naked Scientists:
Hi chaps.
I was just wondering, is it true that the liver can grow back if you
chop away half of it? if so, could that be the answer to the 1000s of people
waiting?
Thanks, Jeremy. I LOVE your show!
What do you think?
- Jeremy Langdon - 11th Sep 08
The short answer is no. Whilst the liver has incredible regenerative potential, that is, it can rapidly replace cells lost to disease, toxins (including alcohol) and senescence, these cells need a connective tissue "scaffold" (known as the ECM - extracellular matrix) to cling to in order to preserve the normal architecture of the liver.
But if a region of the liver is removed then this scaffold goes too, meaning that there is nothing to guide regenerating cells to the correct locations and hence the repair fails.
For this reason removing a lobe of the liver - to cure a cancer or as a donor organ for instance - does not result in the regrowth of the excised lobe. Destroying some liver cells during a drinking binge, however, is repaired because the inert extra-cellular matrix persists and so new liver cells generated from local stem cells can take up the correct positions to restore the normal structure and function.
Chris
- chris - 11th Sep 08