Department of Infectious Diseases, Internal Medicine, Graduate School of Medicine, University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan.
Hepatol Res. 2007 Sep;37 Suppl 2:S115-20. doi: 10.1111/j.1872-034X.2007.00173.x.
Overwhelming lines of epidemiological evidence have indicated that persistent infection with hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a major risk toward development of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). It remains controversial, however, in the pathogenesis of HCC associated with HCV, whether the virus plays a direct role or merely an indirect one. The studies using transgenic mouse models by us and others, in which the core protein of HCV has oncogenic potential, indicate that HCV is directly involved in hepatocarcinogenesis, albeit other factors such as continued cell death and regeneration associated with inflammation would play a role, as well. The downstream events of the core protein are segregated into two components. One is the augmented production of oxidative stress along with the activation of scavenging system including catalase and glutathion (GSH) in the putative preneoplastic stage with steatosis in the liver. Thus, oxidative stress production in the absence of inflammation by the core protein would partly contribute to the development of HCC. The generation of oxidative stress is estimated to originate from mitochondrial dysfunction in hepatocytes by HCV infection. The other is the alteration of intracellular signaling cascade of MAPK (JNK),AP-1, cyclin D1, and CDK4. The combination of these pathways, collective with HCV-associated alterations in lipid and glucose metabolism, would lead to the frequent development of HCC in persistent HCV infection. Our results suggest that there would be a mechanism for hepatocarcinogenesis in persistent HCV infection that is distinct from those for other cancers. Similar to the pathogenesis of other cancers, the accumulation of a set of genetic aberrations may also be necessary for multistage development of HCC. However, HCV core protein, to which an oncogenic potential is ascribed, may allow some of the multiple steps to be bypassed in hepatocarcinogenesis. Therefore, unlike other cancers, HCV infection can elicit HCC in the absence of a complete set of genetic aberrations. Such a scenario, "non-Vogelstein-type" carcinogenesis, would explain the unusually high incidence and multicentric nature of HCC development in HCV infection.
大量的流行病学证据表明,丙型肝炎病毒(HCV)持续感染是肝细胞癌(HCC)发生的主要危险因素。然而,在与 HCV 相关的 HCC 的发病机制中,病毒是直接作用还是间接作用仍存在争议。我们和其他人使用转基因小鼠模型的研究表明,HCV 的核心蛋白具有致癌潜力,表明 HCV 直接参与肝癌的发生,尽管其他因素,如与炎症相关的持续细胞死亡和再生,也会发挥作用。核心蛋白的下游事件分为两个组成部分。一个是在肝脏脂肪变性的潜在癌前阶段,氧化应激的增强伴随着包括过氧化氢酶和谷胱甘肽(GSH)在内的清除系统的激活。因此,核心蛋白在没有炎症的情况下产生的氧化应激部分有助于 HCC 的发展。氧化应激的产生估计源于 HCV 感染引起的肝细胞线粒体功能障碍。另一个是 MAPK(JNK)、AP-1、细胞周期蛋白 D1 和 CDK4 细胞内信号转导级联的改变。这些途径的结合,加上 HCV 相关的脂质和葡萄糖代谢改变,将导致持续 HCV 感染中 HCC 的频繁发生。我们的研究结果表明,在持续的 HCV 感染中存在一种不同于其他癌症的肝癌发生机制。与其他癌症的发病机制相似,一组遗传异常的积累也可能是 HCC 多阶段发展所必需的。然而,被认为具有致癌潜力的 HCV 核心蛋白可能允许肝癌发生过程中的一些多步骤被绕过。因此,与其他癌症不同,HCV 感染可以在没有完整遗传异常集的情况下引发 HCC。这种情况,“非 Vogelstein 型”致癌作用,解释了 HCV 感染中 HCC 发生率异常高和多中心发生的原因。