Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0345904 (liver cancer)
15,188 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Each of the risk factors for human liver cancer (aflatoxin exposure, hepatitis B virus-associated liver injury, p53 loss, p53ser249 mutation, and male sex) also increases the incidence of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in mouse models of hepatocarcinogenesis. Neonatal mice, partially hepatectomized adult mice, and p53-deficient mice each have a higher hepatocyte proliferation rate, are less able to detoxify AFB1, and form more DNA adducts than do normal wild-type controls. However, transgenic hepatitis B surface antigen mice, expressing hepatitis B surface antigen under control of the albumin promoter (alb/psx), are able to detoxify AFB1 at the same level as do wild-type mice. Thus, AFB1-induced HCC development in neonatal mice and p53+/- mice may be due to "immature" carcinogen metabolism, whereas increased HCC in transgenic hepatitis B virus mice may be due to promotion effects of increased proliferation. Future studies will explore the effects of modifying factors on the development of HCC.
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PMID:Mouse models to study the interaction of risk factors for human liver cancer. 1463 66

Metastasis remains one of the major challenges before hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is finally conquered. This paper summarized a decade's studies on HCC metastasis at the Liver Cancer Institute of Fudan University. We have established a stepwise metastatic human HCC model system, which included a metastatic HCC model in nude mice (LCI-D20), a HCC cell line with high metastatic potential (MHCC97), a relatively low metastatic potential cell clone (MHCC97L) and several stepwise high metastatic potential cell clones (MHCC97H, HCCLM3, and HCCLM6) from their parent MHCC97 cell. Endeavors have been made for searching human HCC metastasis-related chromosomes/proteins/genes. Monogene-based studies revealed that HCC invasion/metastasis was similar to that of other solid tumors, and the biological characteristics of small HCC were only slightly better than that of large HCC. Using comparative genomic hybridization (CGH), fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH), genotyping, cDNA microarray, and 2-dimensional gel electrophoresis, we obtained some interesting results. In particular, in collaboration with the National Institute of Health (NIH) in the United States, we generated a molecular signature that can classify metastatic HCC patients, identified osteopontin as a lead gene in the signature, and found that genes favoring metastasis progression were initiated in the primary tumors. We also found that chromosome 8p deletion, particularly in the region of 8p23, was associated with HCC metastasis. Cytokeratin 19 was identified as one of the proteins, which was found in MHCC97H, but not in MHCC97L cells. Experimental interventions using the high metastatic nude mice model have provided clues for the prevention of HCC metastasis. Translation from workbench to bedside demonstrated that serum VEGF, microvessel density, and p53 scoring may be of value for the prediction of postoperative metastatic recurrence. Interferon alpha proved effective for the prevention of recurrence both experimentally and clinically. In conclusion, HCC metastasis that probably initiated in the primary tumor is a multigene-involved, multistep, and changing process. The further elucidation of the mechanism underlying HCC metastasis will provide a more solid basis for the prediction and prevention of the metastatic recurrence of HCC.
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PMID:A decade's studies on metastasis of hepatocellular carcinoma. 1468 50

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the most important primary hepatic cancer and is a common cancer type worldwide. Many aetiological factors have been related to HCC development, such as liver cirrhosis, hepatitis viruses and alcohol consumption. Inactivation of the p53 tumour suppressor gene is one of the most common abnormalities in many tumours, including HCC. p53 is of crucial importance for the regulation of the cell cycle and the maintenance of genomic integrity. In HCC, hepatitis B and C virus (HBV and HCV) effect carcinogenic pathways, independently leading to anomalies in p53 function. Several authors have reported that some HCV proteins, such as the core, NS5A and NS3 proteins, interact with p53 and prevent its correct function. The mechanisms of action of these HCV proteins in relation to p53 are not completely clear, but they might cause its cytoplasmic retention or accumulation in the perinuclear region where the protein is not functional. The identification of the interactions between p53 and HCV proteins is of great importance for therapeutic strategies aimed at reducing the chronicity and/or carcinogenicity of the virus.
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PMID:Hepatocellular carcinoma: molecular interactions between hepatitis C virus and p53 in hepatocarcinogenesis. 1498 3

Chemoresistance is a major problem in the treatment of hepatocellular carcinoma. Certain p53 mutants may enhance drug resistance in cancer cells. To determine whether two frequently occurring p53 mutants, R248Q and R273C, would increase the drug resistance of liver cancer cells, stable cell lines expressing these specific p53 mutants were established by transfecting the p53-null Hep3B cells with mutant p53 expression vectors, and then treating them with the anticancer drugs doxorubicin and paclitaxel. The cells expressing the p53 mutant, R248Q, but not R273C, displayed cross-resistance to both drugs, in contrast to the control cells expressing the vector alone. Moreover, both the expression and the activity of the multiple drug resistance gene product, P-glycoprotein, were elevated in p53 mutant R248Q-expressing cells. Reduced uptake of doxorubicin was also observed in the R248Q-expressing cells. These results suggest that expression of the p53 mutant, R248Q, in liver cancer cells may enhance their drug resistance and that upregulation of P-glycoprotein activity may contribute to this protective effect.
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PMID:Mutant p53 expression enhances drug resistance in a hepatocellular carcinoma cell line. 1500 24

Centrosome duplication is controlled in a cell cycle-specific manner and occurs once every cell cycle, thereby ensuring the balanced segregation of chromosomes during the mitotic phase. Numerical or structural abnormalities can arise in the centrosomes of malignant cells. Under defective cell cycle checkpoint systems, cancer cells with abnormal centrosomes can survive and re-enter the cell cycle, promoting unbalanced chromosome segregation and genetic instability. We investigated the centrosome aberrations in 33 patients diagnosed with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), using fluorescent pericentrin immunostaining. We also studied the p53 mutation, proliferative activity, and DNA ploidy in these cases. In normal hepatocytes, one centrosome was identified per cell as a round dot, usually in the vicinity of the nuclear membrane. However, in cancer cells from HCC tissue, several patterns of centrosome abnormalities occurred, including supernumerary centrosomes and centrosomes with an abnormal shape and size. Although the frequency of abnormal centrosomes in each tissue was relatively low compared with previous reports in other cancers, nevertheless, centrosome aberration was found in 30 out of 33 HCC tissues. The percentage of tumor cells with abnormal centrosomes was significantly higher in the nondiploid tumors (15.8+/-15.9 per thousand ) than in the diploid tumors (5.4+/-5.1 per thousand ) (P<0.05), and tended to be higher in the tumors with p53 mutation (11.6+/-13.1 per thousand ) than in those with wild-type p53 (5.6+/-6.8 per thousand ). Furthermore, 82% of nondiploid tumors exhibited p53 mutation, whereas only 41% of diploid tumors showed p53 mutation. The percentage of tumor cells with centrosome abnormalities were not related to tumor stage, size or proliferative activity. Therefore, our results indicate that hepatic cancer cells, under centrosome aberration and a defective checkpoint system possibly caused by p53 mutation, have the potential for genetic instability and aggressive behavior. This potential effect occurs irrespective of the tumor size or stage.
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PMID:Centrosome aberration accompanied with p53 mutation can induce genetic instability in hepatocellular carcinoma. 1504 20

Although the overview above provides a partial molecular picture of the early stages of stepwise hepatocarcinogenesis. it should be emphasized that tumor and nontumor liver contain multiple changes, and that there is variability in their profile among different patients even within single studies. Variability in the number and types of genetic changes has also been observed geographically, and may be dependent upon the etiology of the tumor (viral, chemical or both). Interestingly, HBxAg inactivates tumor suppressors (such as p53 [by direct binding] and Rb [by stimulating its phosphorylation]) early in carcinogenesis that are mutated later during tumor progression. HBxAg also constitutively activates signal transduction pathways, such as those involving c-jun and ras, and activates oncogenes,such as c-nloc, that are otherwise activated by 3-catenin mutations. These findings suggest common molecular targets in hepatocarcinogenesis, despite different mechanisms of activation or inactivation. These observations need to be exploited in future drug discovery and in the development of new therapeutics. Heterogeneity in the mechanisms of tumor development, evidenced by the differences in the up- and down regulated genes reported in micro array analyses, as well as in the genetic loci that undergo mutation or LOH indifferent reports, has now been well documented. This suggests that there are multiple pathways to HCC, and that there is redundancy in the pathways that regulate cell growth and survival. These findings also reflect that,although hepatocarcinogenesis is multistep, the molecular changes that underpin histopathological changes in tumor development are likely to be different or only partially overlapping in individual tumors. Overall, the consequences of these changes suggest that the pathogenesis of HCC is accompanied by a progressive loss of differentiation, loss of normal cell adhesion, loss of the ECM, and constitutive activation of selected signal transduction pathways that promote cell growth and survival. Although mechanisms are important, attention also has to be paid to the target genes whose altered expression actually mediate the neoplastic phenotype. Other key avenues of work need to be explored. For example, it will be important to try to identify germline mutations in HBV-infected patients that are passed on to their children, resulting in the development of HCC in childhood. Clinical materials will also be important for the validation of new markers with diagnostic or prognostic potential. In this context, there is an urgent need to establish simple and low-cost tests based upon molecular changes that are hallmarks of HCC development. Identification of patients with early HCC will also significantly increase survival through its impact upon treatment. The discovery and validation of HCC markers may permit accurate staging of lesions, determine the proximity of such lesions to malignancy, and determine whether lesions with a particular genetic profile are still capable of remodeling through appropriate therapeutic intervention. The efficient reintroduction of the relevant tumor suppressors, or the inhibition of oncogene expression by siRNA, provide just some of the additional opportunities that will ultimately be useful in patient treatment. Together, these approaches will go far in reducing the very high morbidity and mortality associated with HCC.
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PMID:Early molecular and genetic determinants of primary liver malignancy. 1506 49

Flavonoids are a broadly distributed class of plant pigments, universally present in vascular plants and responsible for much of the coloring in nature. They are strong antioxidants that occur naturally in foods and can inhibit carcinogenesis in rodents. In this study, we examined acacetin (5,7-dihydroxy-4'-methoxyflavone), a flavonoid compound, for its effect on proliferation in a human liver cancer cell line, Hep G2. The results showed that acacetin inhibited the proliferation of Hep G2 by inducing apoptosis and blocking cell cycle progression in the G1 phase. Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay showed that acacetin significantly increased the expression of p53 and p21/WAF1 protein, contributing to cell cycle arrest. An enhancement in Fas/APO-1 and its two form ligands, membrane-bound Fas ligand and soluble Fas ligand, as well as Bax protein, was responsible for the apoptotic effect induced by acacetin. Taken together, our study suggests that the induction of p53 and activity of the Fas/Fas ligand apoptotic system may participate in the antiproliferative activity of acacetin in Hep G2 cells.
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PMID:Acacetin inhibits the proliferation of Hep G2 by blocking cell cycle progression and inducing apoptosis. 1510 35

Chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is the most frequent cause of progressive liver disease and liver cancer in the West. The p53 tumor suppressor gene is known to play an important role in carcinogenesis of different tissues being involved in gene transcription, DNA synthesis and repair and somatic mutations of p53 are common in primary liver cancer. The p53 gene displays a common genetic Arg/Pro polymorphism at codon 72 with functional significance, that has been investigated as risk factor in several cancer models. We analyzed p53 codon 72 polymorphism in a group of 340 HCV-infected subjects at different stages of disease, including 84 hepatocellular carcinoma patients. No association between codon 72 genotypes and disease severity or liver cancer was observed.
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PMID:Codon 72 polymorphism of P53 gene does not affect the risk of cirrhosis and hepatocarcinoma in HCV-infected patients. 1510 48

In this study, we report the proapoptotic effect of saikosaponin d in two liver cancer cell lines, Hep G2 and Hep 3B cells. Treatment with saikosaponin d decreased the cell proliferation of Hep G2 and Hep 3B cells in a dose dependent manner. In Hep G2, saikosaponin d blocked the progression of cell cycle at G1 phase by inducing p53 expression and further up-regulating p21/WAF1 expression. In addition, an enhancement in Fas/APO-1 and its two form ligands, membrane-bound Fas ligand (mFasL) and soluble Fas ligand (sFasL), as well as Bax protein, was responsible for the apoptotic effect induced by saikosaponin d. Furthermore, saikosaponin d also inhibited the cell survival signaling by enhancing the amount of IkappaBalpha in cytoplasm and reducing the level and activity of NF-kappaB in the nucleus, and subsequently attenuated the expression of Bcl-XL in Hep G2 and Hep 3B cells. Saikosaponin d therefore decreased the cell proliferation and inducted apoptosis both in p53-positive Hep G2 and p53-negative Hep 3B cells.
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PMID:Involvement of p53, nuclear factor kappaB and Fas/Fas ligand in induction of apoptosis and cell cycle arrest by saikosaponin d in human hepatoma cell lines. 1532 37

The hepatitis B virus X protein (HBx) is implicated in liver cancer development, and this presumably involves its ability to bind and functionally inactivate the p53 tumour suppressor. For example expression of HBx in cultured cells has been shown to inhibit global nucleotide excision repair, a p53-dependent subpathway of nucleotide excision repair (NER) which eliminates helix-distorting DNA adducts, e.g., UV-induced cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPDs), from the genome overall. However it remains undetermined whether HBx also interferes with transcription-coupled NER (TCNER), another NER subpathway which removes DNA adducts uniquely from the transcribed strand (TS) of active genes. To address this, we employed the model human lymphoblastoid strain TK6 and its isogenic p53-null counterpart NH32, in conjunction with derivatives of these strains constitutively expressing HBx (TK6-HBx and NH32-HBx). Relative to TK6, following exposure to either UVB (290-320 nm) or UVC (254 nm), TK6-HBx, NH32 and NH32-HBx manifested significantly reduced apoptotic capacity to varying degrees, although no striking differences in clonogenic survival between the four strains were observed. As previously documented in our laboratory [Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 100 (2003) 7219-7224], ligation-mediated PCR analysis revealed NH32 to be deficient compared with TK6 in CPD removal along the TS strand of the chromosomal c-jun locus following UVB exposure, but to be proficient in this respect following UVC exposure, i.e., the requirement for p53 in TCNER exhibits wavelength dependence in human cells. Remarkably however, in contrast to the situation for NH32, TK6-HBx and NH32-HBx manifested defective repair along the TS of c-jun after irradiation with either UVB or UVC. The data demonstrate that HBx expression can reduce the efficiency of TCNER in addition to GNER in human cells via p53-independent as well as p53-dependent pathways.
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PMID:Expression of hepatitis B virus X oncoprotein inhibits transcription-coupled nucleotide excision repair in human cells. 1545 Apr 28


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