Abstract
Chronic infection with hepatitis B virus (HBV) is associated with the development of human hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). One of the HBV genes, HBx, may have transforming potential, but this issue is still the subject of controversy. One of the major difficulties in addressing this question is the lack of a suitable in vitro model. We used a nontransformed, differentiated murine hepatocyte cell line (AML12) to transfect the HBx gene and examine its transforming capabilities. Because mutations of the p53 gene, in particular at codon 249, have been implicated in HCC development in geographical areas with high incidence of the tumor, we also studied the putative cooperative role in transformation between HBx and mutated p53 by cotransfecting HBx with a murine p53 mutant equivalent to human ser249 (ser246p53). Transfection with HBx plasmids containing the HBx gene under the control of two different promoters resulted in fewer colonies than in control plasmids. The toxic effect of HBx on colony formation was abolished by cotransfection with 246p53, suggesting that the inhibitory effect requires functionally intact p53. Clonal cell lines that stably expressed HBx messenger RNA (mRNA) (HBX lines) were tested for their growth characteristics and their ability to grow in soft agar and form tumors in nude mice. At passages 19-27 after transfection, one of four HBx-expressing lines showed the capacity for anchorage-independent growth in soft agar and produced poorly differentiated hepatocellular carcinomas in 8 of 13 sites of injection in nude mice. HBX lines as well as clonal cell lines of cells transfected with 246p53 (246 cell lines), cotransfected with HBx and 246p53 (246x lines) or transfected with control plasmids, were analyzed by flow cytometry to determine the fraction of cells in S phase (SPF). 246 and 246X lines had similar SPFs that were approximately twofold greater than control or HBX lines. 246x lines showed morphological changes in culture such as marked cellular heterogeneity, cell crowding, and the presence of multinucleated giant cells, but their tumorigenicity was not increased compared with the HBX lines. These data show that HBx has a weak tumorigenicity in murine hepatocytes and that the addition of mutation of p53 at codon 249 to HBx expression does not increase tumorigenicity in AML12 cells. (Hepatology 1996 Nov;24(5):1024-33)
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