Aydin Yucel, Chatterjee Animesh, Chandra Partha K, Chava Srinivas, Chen Weina, Tandon Anamika, Dash Asha, Chedid Milad, Moehlen Martin W, Regenstein Frederic, Balart Luis A, Cohen Ari, Lu Hua, Wu Tong, Dash Srikanta
Department of Medicine, Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology Tulane University Health Sciences Center New Orleans LA.
Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Tulane University Health Sciences Center New Orleans LA.
Hepatol Commun. 2017 Mar 28;1(3):256-269. doi: 10.1002/hep4.1025. eCollection 2017 May.
The mechanism why hepatitis C virus (HCV) clearance by direct-acting antivirals (DAAs) does not eliminate the risk of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) among patients with advanced cirrhosis is unclear. Many viral and bacterial infections degrade p53 in favor of cell survival to adapt an endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-stress response. In this study, we examined whether HCV clearance by interferon-alpha or DAAs normalizes the ER stress and restores the expression of p53 tumor suppressor in cell culture. We found that HCV infection induces chronic ER stress and unfolded protein response in untransformed primary human hepatocytes. The unfolded protein response induces chaperone-mediated autophagy (CMA) in infected primary human hepatocytes and Huh-7.5 cells that results in degradation of p53 and induced expression of mouse double minute 2 (Mdm2). Inhibition of p53/Mdm2 interactions by small molecule (nutlin-3) or silencing Mdm2 did not rescue the p53 degradation, indicating that HCV infection induces degradation of p53 independent of the Mdm2 pathway. Interestingly, we found that HCV infection degrades p53 in a lysosome-dependent mechanism because lysosome-associated membrane protein 2A silencing restored p53 degradation. Our results show that HCV clearance induced by interferon-alpha-based antiviral therapies normalizes the ER-stress response and restores p53, whereas HCV clearance by DAAs does neither. We show that decreased expression of p53 in HCV-infected cirrhotic liver is associated with expression of chaperones associated with ER stress and the CMA response. : HCV-induced ER stress and CMA promote p53 degradation in advanced liver cirrhosis. HCV clearance by DAAs does not restore p53, which provides a potential explanation for why a viral cure by DAAs does not eliminate the HCC risk among patients with advanced liver disease. We propose that resolving the ER-stress response is an alternative approach to reducing HCC risk among patients with cirrhosis after viral cure. ( 2017;1:256-269).
直接作用抗病毒药物(DAAs)清除丙型肝炎病毒(HCV)后,为何无法消除晚期肝硬化患者肝细胞癌(HCC)风险的机制尚不清楚。许多病毒和细菌感染会降解p53以利于细胞存活,从而适应内质网(ER)应激反应。在本研究中,我们检测了α干扰素或DAAs清除HCV是否能使ER应激正常化,并在细胞培养中恢复p53肿瘤抑制因子的表达。我们发现HCV感染会在未转化的原代人肝细胞中诱导慢性ER应激和未折叠蛋白反应。未折叠蛋白反应会在受感染的原代人肝细胞和Huh-7.5细胞中诱导伴侣介导的自噬(CMA),这会导致p53降解并诱导小鼠双微体2(Mdm2)的表达。小分子(nutlin-3)抑制p53/Mdm2相互作用或沉默Mdm2并不能挽救p53降解,这表明HCV感染诱导p53降解独立于Mdm2途径。有趣的是,我们发现HCV感染以溶酶体依赖性机制降解p53,因为沉默溶酶体相关膜蛋白2A可恢复p53降解。我们的结果表明,基于α干扰素的抗病毒疗法诱导的HCV清除可使ER应激反应正常化并恢复p53,而DAAs清除HCV则不然。我们表明,HCV感染的肝硬化肝脏中p53表达降低与ER应激和CMA反应相关的伴侣蛋白表达有关。:HCV诱导的ER应激和CMA促进晚期肝硬化中p53降解。DAAs清除HCV不能恢复p53,这为DAAs病毒治愈为何不能消除晚期肝病患者的HCC风险提供了一个潜在解释。我们提出,解决ER应激反应是降低病毒治愈后肝硬化患者HCC风险的另一种方法。(2017;1:256 - 269)