Abstract

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection triggers autophagy processes, which help clear out the dysfunctional viral and cellular components that would otherwise inhibit the virus replication. Increased cellular autophagy may kill the infected cell and terminate the infection without proper regulation. The mechanism of autophagy regulation during liver disease progression in HCV infection is unclear. The autophagy research has gained a lot of attention recently since autophagy impairment is associated with the development of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Macroautophagy, microautophagy, and chaperone-mediated autophagy (CMA) are three autophagy processes involved in the lysosomal degradation and extracellular release of cytosolic cargoes under excessive stress. Autophagy processes compensate for each other during extreme endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress to promote host and microbe survival as well as HCC development in the highly stressed microenvironment of the cirrhotic liver. This review describes the molecular details of how excessive cellular stress generated during HCV infection activates CMA to improve cell survival. The pathological implications of stress-related CMA activation resulting in the loss of hepatic innate immunity and tumor suppressors, which are most often observed among cirrhotic patients with HCC, are discussed. The oncogenic cell programming through autophagy regulation initiated by a cytoplasmic virus may facilitate our understanding of HCC mechanisms related to non-viral etiologies and metabolic conditions such as uncontrolled type II diabetes. We propose that a better understanding of how excessive cellular stress leads to cancer through autophagy modulation may allow therapeutic development and early detection of HCC.

Highlights

  • Hepatocellular Carcinoma (HCC) is one of the most common types of liver cancer [1]

  • This review provides the molecular basis of autophagy switching in which tumor suppressor autophagy is converted to tumor-promoting form

  • endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress response generated during chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection promotes cell survival pathways that link to hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) development

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Summary

Introduction

Hepatocellular Carcinoma (HCC) is one of the most common types of liver cancer [1]. Most of the HCC cases are accompanied by cirrhosis that results from long-standing chronic inflammation due to viral hepatitis or non-viral etiologies including heavy alcohol intake, nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), autoimmune hepatitis, primary biliary cirrhosis, and hemochromatosis [2]. GCN2/eukaryotic translation initiation kinase 4(EIF2AK4) is a protein kinase that is activated in the due to cytoplasmic accumulation of tRNAs that results from amino acid depletion [23,24] This is consistent with a report by Selitsky et al that shows small tRNAs concentration are increased in chronic HCV infection and liver cancer [25]. The accumulation of longer fatty acids and cholesterol in the infected cells could inhibit the ubiquitin-dependent protein degradation pathway; increases ER stress [31] These results are in agreement with another study showing that HCV-induced cholesterol biosynthesis increases ER stress, steatohepatitis, and increases incidence HCC in HCV core transgenic mice [32]. Stress becomes severe this can activate NRF2 transcription and chaperone-mediated autophagy (CMA) activation

Excessive
Chaperone-Mediated
The Mechanism of Stress-Induced CMA
Oxidative Stress Promotes Nrf2-Mediated Lamp2a Activation
The MTOR Axis Modulates CMA through Autolysosome Lysosome Reformation
The Pathological Implication of CMA Activation in HCV-Induced Liver Disease
Autophagy Inhibition Activates Oncogenic Signaling
Hepatic Adaptive Response to HCV-Associated Stress Degrades Tumor Suppressors
Treatment
Findings
Summary and Conclusions
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