Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany.
Research Department Cell and Gene Therapy, Clinic for Stem Cell Transplantation, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany.
Oncogene. 2015 Jan 15;34(3):364-72. doi: 10.1038/onc.2013.551. Epub 2014 Jan 13.
Carcinogenesis is a multistep process involving alterations in various cellular pathways. The critical genetic events driving the evolution of primary liver cancer, specifically hepatoblastoma and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), are still poorly understood. However, telomere stabilization is acknowledged as prerequisite for cancer progression in humans. In this project, human fetal hepatocytes were utilized as a cell culture model for untransformed, proliferating human liver cells, with telomerase activation as first oncogenic hit. To elucidate critical downstream genetic events driving further transformation of immortalized liver cells, we used retroviral insertional mutagenesis as an unbiased approach to induce genetic alterations. Following isolation of hyperproliferating, provirus-bearing cell clones, we monitored cancer-associated growth properties and characterized changes toward a malignant phenotype. Three transformed clones with the ability to form colonies in soft agar were expanded. As proof-of-principle for our experimental setup, we identified a transforming insertion on chromosome 8 within the pleiomorphic adenoma gene 1 (PLAG1), resulting in a 20-fold increase in PLAG1 expression. Upregulation of PLAG1 has already been described to promote human hepatoblastoma development. In a separate clone, a transforming insertion was detected in close proximity to the receptor-interacting serine-threonine kinase 4 (RIPK4) with an approximately eightfold suppression in RIPK4 expression. As validation for this currently unknown driver in hepatocarcinogenesis, we examined RIPK4 expression in human HCC samples and confirmed a significant suppression of RIPK4 in 80% of the samples. Furthermore, overexpression of RIPK4 in transformed human fetal hepatocytes resulted in an almost complete elimination of anchorage-independent growth. On the basis of these data, we propose RIPK4 as a novel putative tumor suppressor in human hepatocarcinogenesis.
癌变是一个多步骤的过程,涉及到各种细胞途径的改变。导致原发性肝癌(尤其是肝母细胞瘤和肝细胞癌)演变的关键遗传事件仍知之甚少。然而,端粒稳定被认为是人类癌症进展的必要条件。在这个项目中,人类胎儿肝细胞被用作未转化、增殖的人类肝细胞的细胞培养模型,端粒酶激活是第一个致癌打击。为了阐明导致永生化肝细胞进一步转化的关键下游遗传事件,我们使用逆转录病毒插入诱变作为一种无偏的方法来诱导遗传改变。在分离出过度增殖、携带前病毒的细胞克隆后,我们监测了与癌症相关的生长特性,并对向恶性表型的变化进行了特征描述。三个具有在软琼脂中形成菌落能力的转化克隆被扩大。作为我们实验设置的原理证明,我们在染色体 8 上发现了一个位于多形性腺瘤基因 1(PLAG1)内的致癌插入,导致 PLAG1 表达增加了 20 倍。PLAG1 的上调已被描述为促进人类肝母细胞瘤的发展。在另一个克隆中,在受体相互作用丝氨酸-苏氨酸激酶 4(RIPK4)附近检测到一个转化插入,导致 RIPK4 表达约八倍抑制。作为对这种在肝癌发生中目前未知的驱动因素的验证,我们检查了 RIPK4 在人类 HCC 样本中的表达,并证实 80%的样本中 RIPK4 表达受到显著抑制。此外,在转化的人胎儿肝细胞中过表达 RIPK4 导致几乎完全消除了非锚定依赖性生长。基于这些数据,我们提出 RIPK4 作为人类肝癌发生中的一种新的潜在肿瘤抑制因子。