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ABSTRACT: Annexin A10 (ANXA10) and its liver-specific short isoform (ANXA10S) had tissue-restricted expression. The downregulation of ANXA10S is correlated with tumor progression and poor prognosis in hepatocellular carcinoma. The aim of the present study was to validate the tissue distribution and explore the role of the ANXA10 protein expression in gastric carcinoma.
We examined the ANXA10 protein expression in human and animal tissues and 356 resected primary gastric carcinomas, using specific mouse and rabbit polyclonal antibodies, by immunohistochemical staining.
The ANXA10 protein is a nuclear protein specifically expressed in fetal and adult gastric mucosa and Brunner's gland across species, including humans, minipigs, woodchucks, and mice, and is commonly lost in gastric mucosa with intestinal metaplasia. The ANXA10 protein was expressed in 43.5% (155 cases) of gastric carcinomas; 74.2% (98/132) in the diffuse-type gastric carcinoma (DGC), 73.7% (28/38) in the mixed-type gastric carcinoma, and significantly lower in the intestinal-type gastric carcinoma (IGC) and indeterminate groups, 16.8% (28/167) and 5.3% (1/19), respectively (P<1×10(-8)). IGC with ANXA10 expression was correlated with a higher stage (P=0.049), particularly higher in stage IIIA/IIIB/IV IGC than lower-stage (IA/IB/II) tumors (P=0.005), but was not correlated with age, sex, and nodal status. In contrast, DGC with ANXA10 expression was associated with younger age, female patients, and importantly, lower tumor stage and lymph node metastasis (P=0.007, P=0.065, P=0.024, and P=0.0014, respectively). Moreover, DGC with ANXA10 expression had a better 5-year patient survival (P=0.0048), whereas IGC with ANXA10 expression had a lower 5-year survival (P=0.034).
The ANXA10 protein expression is a novel marker of gastric differentiation, and is differentially expressed in IGC and DGC, with opposite prognostic significance.
Journal of Gastroenterology and Hepatology 01/2011; 26(1):90-7. · 2.87 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Abnormal spindle-like microcephaly associated (ASPM) plays an important role in neurogenesis and cell proliferation. This study is to elucidate its role in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), particularly early tumor recurrence (ETR) and prognosis.
We used reverse transcription-PCR assays to measure the ASPM mRNA levels in 247 HCC and correlated with clinicopathologic and molecular features.
ASPM mRNA levels were high in fetal tissues but very low in most adult tissues. ASPM mRNA was overexpressed in 162 HCC (66%) but not in benign liver tumors. ASPM overexpression correlated with high alpha-fetoprotein (P = 1 x 10(-8)), high-grade (grade II-IV) HCC (P = 2 x 10(-6)), high-stage (stage IIIA-IV) HCC (P = 1 x 10(-8)), and importantly ETR (P = 1 x 10(-8)). ETR is the most critical unfavorable clinical prognostic factor. Among the various independent histopathologic (tumor size, tumor grade and tumor stage) and molecular factors (p53 mutation, high alpha-fetoprotein, and ASPM overexpression), tumor stage was the most crucial histologic factor (odds ratio, 14.7; 95% confidence interval, 6.65-33.0; P = 1 x 10(-8)), whereas ASPM overexpression (odds ratio, 6.49; P = 1 x 10(-8)) is the most important molecular factor associated with ETR. ASPM overexpression was associated with vascular invasion and ETR in both p53-mutated (all P values = 1 x 10(-8)) and non-p53-mutated HCC (P = 1 x 10(-8) and 0.00088, respectively). Hence, patients with APSM-overexpressing HCC had lower 5-year survival (P = 0.000001) in both p53-mutated (P = 0.00008) and non-p53-mutated HCC (P = 0.0027). In low-stage (stage II) HCC, ASPM overexpression also correlated with higher ETR (P = 0.008).
ASPM overexpression is a molecular marker predicting enhanced invasive/metastatic potential of HCC, higher risk of ETR regardless of p53 mutation status and tumor stage, and hence poor prognosis.
Clinical Cancer Research 09/2008; 14(15):4814-20. · 7.74 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Cancer cells with a high glycolytic rate have an advantage in tumor growth. Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) often exhibits an aberrant expression of glycolytic enzymes, particularly type II hexokinase (HKII) and aldolase B (ALDOB). This study examined the aberrant expression of HKII and ALDOB in 203 surgically resected HCCs. A dramatic down-regulation of ALDOB was found in 116 HCCs (57%), while 43% of HCCs maintained the expression. HKII mRNA was overexpressed in 70 (35%) primary HCCs. The ALDOB down-regulation and HKII overexpression correlated with high-grade (grade II-IV) HCC (all ps<0.0001), portal vein invasion (stage IIIB-IV) (ps<1x10(-6)), early tumor recurrence (ETR) (p<0.001 and p<0.01, respectively) and a lower 5-year survival (p=0.000001 and p=0.0062, respectively). Notably, in stage II HCC which had no vascular invasion, the ALDOB down-regulation was associated with ETR (p<0.05) and a lower 5-year survival (p=0.015). The down-regulation of ALDOB correlated with a high AFP (p=1x10(-8)), whereas the overexpression of HKII, which has two functional motifs for the mutant p53, correlated with the p53 mutation, p<0.01. The three factors (ALDOB down-regulation, HKII overexpression and p53 mutation) not only correlated with tumor progression, but also interacted with one another, leading to a more aggressive HCC with a portal vein invasion and various extent of intrahepatic metastasis by more than four-fold (ps<1x10(-6)) and frequent ETR by more than two-fold (ps<0.0001) compared with HCCs without the events. In conclusion, the aberrant expression of ALDOB and HKII is associated with advanced disease, ETR and poor prognosis, and ALDOB down-regulation in stage II HCC is a predictive marker of ETR and an unfavorable outcome.
Oncology Reports 04/2008; 19(4):1045-53. · 1.84 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: L2DTL is a human ortholog of Drosophila lethal (2) denticleless, l(2)dtl. This study is to elucidate its function and clinicopathological significance in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) progression. We used RT-PCR, immunostaining, Western blotting, and centrosome isolation to determine the L2DTL expression and protein localization, and RNAi to analyze its role in tumor cell growth. L2DTL protein located to the nucleus in interphase and centered to centrosomes, with colocalization of gamma-tubulin and Aurora-A, throughout the cell cycle, and cofractionated with gamma-tubulin. L2DTL gene expression increased during G1/S phase, and the DNA synthesis in liver regeneration. L2DTL protein decreased in mitosis via degradation by the APC/C-Cdh1 complex. L2DTL was downregulated in the induced differentiation of HepG2 and NT2 cells. L2DTL downregulation by RNAi oligos led to reduced cancer cell growth and invasion capability in vitro, in which microarray analysis disclosed dysregulation of genes involved in cell cycle regulation, chromosome segregation, and cell division. L2DTL overexpressed in 59% of 270 resected, unifocal, primary HCCs. L2DTL overexpression correlated with bigger tumor (p=0.000003), high-grade (p=0.00003), and high-stage tumors with portal vein invasion (p=1x10(-8)). L2DTL overexpression was associated with a lower 10-year survival, particularly in the p53-mutated HCCs (p=0.00006). In conclusion, L2DTL encodes a nuclear protein with centrosome targeting in mitosis, and plays important roles in DNA synthesis, cell cycle progression, cytokinesis, proliferation, and differentiation. L2DTL overexpression is associated with enhanced metastatic potential of HCC, and contributes synergistically with p53 mutation, which leads to the loss of p53-governed checkpoints, toward advanced HCC with poor prognosis.
Cell cycle (Georgetown, Tex.) 12/2006; 5(22):2676-87. · 5.36 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The messenger RNA and DNA methylation of the α-fetoprotein gene were studied in 101 resected primary hepatocellular carcinomas, of which 93 were unicentric and 8 were multicentric. Fifty-five were 5 cm or less in diameter (small) and 46 were more than 5 cm in diameter (large). In 48.5% of the cases, we detected α-fetoprotein messenger RNA in hepatocellular carcinomas, more frequently in large (60.9%) than in small (38.2%; p < 0.00001) but not in any of the nontumorous livers. The α-fetoprotein messenger RNA was detected in 83%, 70% and 6.8% of patients with serum α-fetoprotein levels of 320 ng/ml or more, 100 to 319 ng/ml and less than 100 ng/ml, respectively. This finding suggests that α-fetoprotein gene expression in hepatocellular carcinoma contributes to the serum α-fetoprotein elevation in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma. α-Fetoprotein messenger RNA appeared as a major band of 2.4 kb, with two minor species of about 6.5 and 3.6 kb in the hepatocellular carcinoma and the fetal liver. Hypomethylation of the 5′ end of the α-fetoprotein gene was detected in 78.3% of hepatocellular carcinomas expressing α-fetoprotein messenger RNA but infrequently (16.7%) in hepatocellular carcinomas with no detectable α-fetoprotein messenger RNA (p < 0.0003). This finding suggests that hypomethylation at the 5′ region of the gene is associated with α-fetoprotein gene reexpression in hepatocellular carcinoma. The α-fetoprotein gene expression helped to differentiate unicentric from multicentric hepatocellular carcinomas and to identify other hidden α-fetoprotein-secreting hepatocellular carcinomas. The α-fetoprotein gene expression occurred more often in patients younger than 30 yr old (100% vs. 41.2%; p < 0.002), in HBsAg-seropositive patients (53.2% vs. 33.3%; p < 0.03) and in patients with poorly differentiated hepatocellular carcinoma (56% vs. 23.1%; p < 0.003). Patients with unicentric small hepatocellular carcinomas expressing α-fetoprotein messenger RNA or serum α-fetoprotein elevation had a worse 2-yr survival rate than those with neither α-fetoprotein messenger RNA expression nor serum α-fetoprotein elevation (70.6% vs. 94.7%; p < 0.02). We conclude that the α-fetoprotein gene expression in hepatocellular carcinoma possesses biological significance. (HEPATOLOGY 1993;17:35–41.)
Hepatology 12/2005; 17(1):35 - 41. · 11.66 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Chromosome 4q exhibits high frequency of allelic loss in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). This study aimed to elucidate the interaction of the frequent aberrant mRNA expression of alpha-fetoprotein (AFP), osteopontin (OPN) and a novel short isoform of annexin A10 (ANXA10S) at 4q in the tumor progression among 294 patients who received surgical resection of unifocal primary HCC. AFP overexpression, OPN overexpression and ANXA10S down-regulation correlated with high-grade and high-stage tumors, early tumor recurrence (all P<0.0001), and lower 10-year survival (all P=0.000001). The AFP overexpression correlated with OPN overexpression (P=0.0026) and ANXA10S down-regulation (P=0.00001), while OPN overexpression correlated with ANXA10S down-regulation (P=0.00001). Pair-wise combinations revealed interactive effects between these genetic variants for tumor grade, tumor stage and early recurrence (all P<0.0001). HCCs with more genetic aberrations had more frequent high tumor grade, portal vein invasion (stage IIIB-IV) and early recurrence (all P<0.0001). The 10-year survival rate for HCCs with all three genetic alterations was the lowest (7%), followed by those with two (22%) or one event (29%), and the highest for those without these changes (43%), P=0.000001. The prognostic stratification using these molecular factors was similar to that of histopathological staging. These three genetic alterations also helped to identify different subgroups of patients of stage II HCC but with different prognosis (P=0.015). In conclusion, the aberrant expressions of AFP, OPN and ANXA10S cooperatively contribute to tumor progression and poor prognosis, and are useful for molecular staging of HCC and the subclassification of stage II HCC without vascular invasion.
International Journal of Oncology 04/2005; 26(4):1053-61. · 2.40 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: alpha-Fetoprotein (AFP) is often elevated in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). This study was to elucidate the significance and related factors of AFP elevation in HCC in 781 unifocal HCCs receiving curative hepatectomy. We showed that high AFP (> 200 ng/ml), which was associated with AFP mRNA expression in HCC (p = 0.00001), correlated with major clinicopathologic factors. Younger age (< or = 55 years; p=0.00001), hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) in serum (p=0.00001), p53 mutation (p=0.008), large tumor (p=0.00001), vascular invasion (p=0.00001) and early tumor recurrence (p=0.00001) were significant associates of high AFP, while anti-HCV in serum and beta-catenin mutation in HCC had less frequent high AFP (p=0.013 and < 0.0001, respectively). We also showed that HCC with high AFP had a lower 10-year survival (p < 0.0001), particularly in large HCC (p < 0.0001). At univariate analysis, high AFP (p < 0.0001), HBsAg positivity (p=0.05), p53 mutation (p=0.0004), liver cirrhosis (p=0.0094), large tumor (p=0.0003), vascular invasion (p < 0.0001) and early recurrence (p < 0.0001) were significant unfavorable prognostic factors. In Cox proportional hazards regression analysis, high AFP remained a borderline significance (OR=1.2; CI=1.0-1.4) after adjustment for the effect of tumor size and tumor stage (p=0.0821). Furthermore, the detection of AFP mRNA in the liver of AFP mRNA-positive HCC was associated with more frequent early recurrence (p=0.0026) and might be a useful marker of intrahepatic spread. We therefore conclude that AFP elevation, more than a coincidental epiphenomenon, appears to contribute to vascular invasion and HCC progression and help to identify subsets of HCC patients with increased risk for early recurrence and poor prognosis after hepatectomy.
International Journal of Cancer 10/2004; 112(1):44-50. · 5.44 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Aurora-A/STK15/BTAK, a centrosome-associated serine/threonine kinase, has been shown to induce chromosomal instability, leading to aneuploidy and cell transformation. The purpose of this study was to investigate the expression and amplification of Aurora-A in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Experimental Design: Aurora-A mRNA levels were measured in 224 HCCs and 199 paired nontumorous liver tissues by reverse transcription-PCR. Aurora-A mRNA and protein levels of 8 were also measured by reverse transcription-PCR and Western blot hybridization in 8 liver cancer cell lines. Amplification of Aurora-A was determined by Southern blot hybridization in 99 cases.
Aurora-A was overexpressed in 137 of 224 (61%) HCCs and all 8 of the cell lines. Overexpression of Aurora-A was associated with high-grade (grade II-IV), and high-stage (stage IIIB-IV) tumors, p53 mutation, infrequent beta-catenin mutation, and poor outcome. Aurora-A overexpression and p53 mutation acted synergistically toward poor prognosis. Amplification of Aurora-A was detected only in 3 HCCs.
The results show that Aurora-A is overexpressed frequently in HCC, and correlated with high grade and high stage, indicating that overexpression of Aurora-A plays a role in the development and progression of HCC.
Clinical Cancer Research 04/2004; 10(6):2065-71. · 7.74 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Intrahepatic metastasis via portal vein spread is an important feature and a crucial unfavorable prognostic factor of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). To identify the molecular factors for tumor progression, the authors used differential display (DD) to analyze aberrant gene expression in HCC. The goal of the current study was to elucidate the clinicopathologic and prognostic significance of osteopontin (OPN) in HCC progression.
OPN mRNA levels, which were increased preferentially in HCC in a DD assay and verified with Northern blotting, were measured in 240 surgically removed, unifocal, primary HCCs using the reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction at the exponential phase. OPN mRNA expression was correlated with clinicopathologic features, particularly portal vein invasion, early tumor recurrence, and prognosis.
Osteopontin mRNA was overexpressed in 133 tumors (55%). The OPN overexpression was associated closely with alpha-fetoprotein elevation (P = 0.001), p53 mutation (P = 0.021), larger tumors (P = 0.002), high-grade HCC (P < 0.001), late-stage HCC (P < 0.001), early tumor recurrence and/or metastasis (P = 0.003), and a lower 10-year survival rate (P = 0.00013). Multivariate analysis revealed that tumor stage and early tumor recurrence were crucial prognostic factors. In early-stage HCC, which has no vascular invasion and a lower early tumor recurrence than late-stage HCC, OPN mRNA overexpression predicted a higher early recurrence rate (P = 0.003).
OPN mRNA overexpression was correlated closely with high-grade, late-stage, and early tumor recurrence, which lead to poorer prognosis. Osteopontin overexpression might serve as an unfavorable prognostic factor and a useful marker for predicting early recurrence in early-stage HCC.
Cancer 07/2003; 98(1):119-27. · 4.77 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Annexins (ANXs) are a large group of calcium-binding proteins participating in diverse important biological processes. ANXA10 is the least expressed new member of unknown function. We showed that ANXA10 mRNA was expressed in adult liver and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), but not in multiple adult and fetal tissues, cholangiocarcinoma, and several other common carcinomas. Of 182 unifocal primary HCCs, ANXA10 mRNA was dramatically reduced in 121 (66%), and the down-regulation correlated with p53 mutation (P = 0.024), early intrahepatic tumor recurrence (P = 0.0007), and lower 4-year survival (P = 0.0014). Down-regulation of ANXA10 was twofold more frequent in large than small HCCs (P = 0.0012), in grade II to III than grade I HCC (P < 0.00001), and in stage IIIA to IV than stage I to II HCC (P < 0.00001). Moreover, ANXA10 down-regulation and p53 mutation acted synergistically toward high-grade (P < 0.00001), high-stage HCC (P < 0.00001), and poorer prognosis (P = 0.0025). Our results indicate that the expression of the tissue- and tumor-restricted ANXA10 is a marker of liver cell differentiation and growth arrest, and its down-regulation associated with malignant phenotype of hepatocytes, vascular invasion, and progression of HCC, leading to poor prognosis. Thus, ANXA10 might serve as a new potential target of gene therapy for HCC.
American Journal Of Pathology 06/2002; 160(5):1831-7. · 4.89 Impact Factor
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M.S. Hey-Chi Hsu D.D.S,
Shian-Yang Peng M.S,
Po-Lin Lai M.S,
Ph.D. Jin-Chuan Sheu M.D,
Ding-Shinn Chen M.D,
Liang-In Lin,
Betty L. Slagle Ph.D,
Janet S. Butel Ph.D,
Hey‐Chi Hsu, Shian‐Yang Peng,
Po‐Lin Lai,
Jin‐Chuan Sheu,
Ding‐Shinn Chen,
Betty L. Slagle,
Janet S. Butel
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ABSTRACT: Background. The allelotype and loss of heterozygosity (LOH) of the p53 gene in human hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) were studied in 150 patients with resected primary HCC and 18 with recurrent HCC.Methods. DNA samples of paired HCC and livers were cut with BanII enzyme for the study of p53 allelotype and allele loss. The medical records of the patients were carefully reviewed.Results. Sixty-four (42.7%) patients were heterozygous for the p53 gene, 69 (46%) were homozygous for the 1.5/1.4 kb small (S) allele, and 17 (11.3%) were homozygous for the 2.9 kb large (L) allele. The frequencies of the minor L allele (0.323) and of the major S allele (0.677) in this population of Chinese patients differed from the frequencies previously reported for North American Caucasians (0.13 and 0.87, respectively). The heterozygous patients tended to have lower serum hepatitis B surface-and e antigens (HBsAg and HBeAg) and higher diabetes mellitus (DM) than did homozygous patients (SS and LL). Thirty-seven (57.8%) of the 64 heterozygous patients had a tumor-specific p53 allele LOH, being two times more common in HCC tumors larger than 8 cm than in HCC tumors 2 cm or smaller. The frequency of DM was four times higher in the heterozygous patients who had p53 LOH than in those who retained both alleles. LOH of p53 did not correlate with tumor invasiveness or differentiation, hepatitis B or C virus infection, or prognosis.Conclusion. The allelotype of p53 gene in HCC correlates with HBsAg and HBeAg seropositivities and DM. LOH of the p53 gene is a common event in HCC, correlates with DM, and occurs less often in familial HCC. LOH can identify the clonal origin of recurrent HCC but is not a critical prognostic factor.
Cancer 12/1993; 73(1):42 - 47. · 4.77 Impact Factor