San Diego Union-Tribune

YOUR EVER-RENEWING LIVER IS YOUNGER THAN YOU REALIZE

- BY ERIN BLAKEMORE Blakemore is a freelance writer. This article first appeared in The Washington Post.

When it comes to the human body, age is just a number. Thanks to the regenerati­ve powers of human cells, our bodies constantly create new cells — to the tune of about 330 billion a day.

But until now, researcher­s haven’t known much about how long the cells of one of the most important organs, the liver, live. Research in the journal Cell Systems reveals that humans’ livers are forever young, clocking in at less than 3 years old despite their hosts’ biological age.

German researcher­s studied the livers of 33 adults who were between ages 20 and 84 when they died. They isolated the nuclei of liver cells called hepatocyte­s — the workhorses of the human liver. Hepatocyte­s make up the bulk of the human liver and perform a dizzying variety of tasks, from aiding with metabolism to taking part in the body’s immune response.

The researcher­s wanted to know whether hepatocyte­s are long-lived, like neurons or the heart’s muscle cells, or whether they’re more transient. Previous studies had focused mainly on rodent livers, leaving unanswered questions on the life cycle of human liver cells.

When the scientists dated the cells, they found an average age of about 3 years regardless of the age of the person who generated the cells. The hepatocyte­s “show continuous and lifelong turnover, allowing the liver to remain a young organ,” they write.

The turnover depended on the type of liver cell. Ninety-five percent of the cells with two complete sets of chromosome­s turned over within a year, but up to 12 percent of a cell subtype that have more than one pair of chromosome­s can survive up to a decade.

“As this fraction gradually increases with age, this could be a protective mechanism that safeguards us from accumulati­ng harmful mutations,” Olaf Bergmann, a research group leader at the Dresden University of Technology’s Center for Regenerati­ve Therapies, said in a news release. “We need to find out if there are similar mechanisms in chronic liver disease, which in some cases can turn into cancer.”

The older the subject, the older the hepatocyte­s, although the researcher­s say most are short-lived.

All in all, the researcher­s project, our bodies produce about 700 million hepatocyte­s each day — not bad for a 3-pound organ.

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