At FOMAT, hepatology is one of our most active therapeutic areas and acute liver failure represents one of the most urgent unmet needs we see in clinical research. With over 2,000 Americans dying from acute liver failure each year and few effective treatments available, discoveries like this one from the University of Michigan point toward entirely new therapeutic pathways. Understanding how the body’s own proteins can be harnessed to protect and repair the liver could fundamentally change how we approach treatment trials in this space. Here is what researchers found about the protein CPS1 and its unexpected role in liver protection:
But when something comes along that badly injures enough of those cells—such as a liver-damaging overdose of pain medicine—this vital work can come to a screeching halt.
Now, new research points to a potential way to prevent that damage, but more importantly even treat it—as well as a possible way to better monitor the health of patients who have suffered from it.
In a new paper published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, a team from the University of Michigan describe how a protein involved in one of the liver’s most basic functions also sounds the alarm when liver cells get hurt.
That alarm, and the help that it summons from the immune system, can help protect the liver from further damage, the researchers report. It can even spur the repair of a damaged liver after injury, says Bishr Omary, M.D., who led the research team.
Unexpected Function
Normally, CPS1 plays a key role in breaking down ammonia, a waste product the body needs to get rid of. It does this in the mitochondria of the major cells of the liver, called hepatocytes.
In the new paper, they report that CPS1 is normally released into the bile but ends up in blood upon acute liver injury. They were surprised to learn where CPS1 disappeared to the inside of white blood cells called monocytes. There, they found, it performs a good deed.
Piecing Together the CPS1 Puzzle
The researchers gave this exogenous CPS1 to mice before they exposed them to levels of acetaminophen—the same common over-the-counter medication that millions of people take, and that holds the potential to damage the liver in high enough doses and in combination with other substances. Even when the mice received doses high enough to cause acute injury, those that received added CPS1 beforehand did not suffer major liver damage.
When the researchers injected CPS1 into mice after they received the high dose of acetaminophen, the animals’ livers showed significant signs of recovery.


