Abstract

Claudins are identified as members of the tetraspanin family of proteins, which are integral to the structure and function of tight junction. Recent studies showed an increase in expression of claudins during tumorigenesis, which is associated with loss of cell-cell contact, dedifferentiation, and invasiveness. However, the molecular basis for the causal relationship between claudin expression and cancer progression is not fully understood yet. In this study, we show that claudin-1 plays a causal role in the acquisition of invasive capacity in human liver cells and that c-Abl-protein kinase Cdelta (PKCdelta) signaling is critical for the malignant progression induced by claudin-1. Overexpression of claudin-1 clearly induced expression of matrix metalloproteinase-2 (MMP-2) and cell invasion and migration in normal liver cells as well as in non-invasive human hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) cells. Conversely, small interfering RNA targeting of claudin-1 in invasive HCC cells completely inhibited cell invasion. Both c-Abl and PKCdelta are found to be activated in normal liver cell line clones that stably overexpress claudin-1. Inhibition of either c-Abl or PKCdelta alone clearly attenuated MMP-2 activation and impeded cell invasion and migration in both human HCC and normal liver cells expressing claudin-1. These results indicate that claudin-1 is both necessary and sufficient to induce invasive behavior in human liver cells and that activation of c-Abl-PKCdelta signaling pathway is critically required for the claudin-1-induced acquisition of the malignant phenotype. The present observations raise the possibility of exploiting claudin-1 as a potential biomarker for the spread of liver cancer and might provide pivotal points for therapeutic intervention in HCC.

Highlights

  • Stages of cancer [1,2,3,4]

  • CLD1 Has a Critical Role in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) Cell Invasion—To investigate the involvement of CLD1 in human HCC cell invasion, we measured CLD1 expression levels in SNU-354, SNU-398, SNU423, SNU-449, and SNU-475 HCC cells and used invasion assays to determine the invasive potential of these five cell lines

  • Overexpression of CLD1 clearly induced cellular invasion in Chang cells, a normal hepatocyte cell line (Fig. 1C). These results indicate that CLD1 may have a critical role in the cellular invasion potential of human HCC cells

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Summary

Introduction

Stages of cancer [1,2,3,4]. It is a multistep process that involves migration of cancer cells from the primary tumor site, penetration into the vascular or lymphatic system, dispersal through the circulation, and extravasation and growth of malignant cells in the target organ [2, 3, 5]. We demonstrate that CLD1 has a causal role in the acquisition of invasive capacity in human liver cells and that activation of c-Abl-PKC␦ signaling is critically involved in CLD1-dependent malignant progression. To further determine whether PKC␦ activity is required for CLD1-dependent cellular invasion, we treated CLD1-overexpressing clones with specific inhibitors of PKC isoforms and analyzed changes in cellular invasion.

Results
Conclusion
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