Abstract

BackgroundHepatocyte growth factor (HGF) induced c-Met activation is known as the main stimulus for hepatocyte proliferation and is essential for liver development and regeneration. Activation of HGF/c-Met signaling has been correlated with aggressive phenotype and poor prognosis in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). MUC1 is a transmembrane mucin, whose over-expression is reported in most cancers. Many of the oncogenic effects of MUC1 are believed to occur through the interaction of MUC1 with signaling molecules. To clarify the role of MUC1 in HGF/c-Met signaling, we determined whether MUC1 and c-Met interact cooperatively and what their role(s) is in hepatocarcinogenesis.ResultsMUC1 and c-Met over-expression levels were determined in highly motile and invasive, mesenchymal-like HCC cell lines, and in serial sections of cirrhotic and HCC tissues, and these levels were compared to those in normal liver tissues. Co-expression of both c-Met and MUC1 was found to be associated with the differentiation status of HCC. We further demonstrated an interaction between c-Met and MUC1 in HCC cells. HGF-induced c-Met phosphorylation decreased this interaction, and down-regulated MUC1 expression. Inhibition of c-Met activation restored HGF-mediated MUC1 down-regulation, and decreased the migratory and invasive abilities of HCC cells via inhibition of β-catenin activation and c-Myc expression. In contrast, siRNA silencing of MUC1 increased HGF-induced c-Met activation and HGF-induced cell motility and invasion.ConclusionsThese findings indicate that the crosstalk between MUC1 and c-Met in HCC could provide an advantage for invasion to HCC cells through the β-catenin/c-Myc pathway. Thus, MUC1 and c-Met could serve as potential therapeutic targets in HCC.

Highlights

  • Hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) induced c-Met activation is known as the main stimulus for hepatocyte proliferation and is essential for liver development and regeneration

  • In this study we observed that poorly-differentiated Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) cell lines overexpressed both Mucin 1 (MUC1) and c-Met, whereas welldifferentiated ones expressed little or no amount of the MUC1 and c-Met proteins. To support these data we analyzed MUC1 and c-Met expression patterns in primary HCC tissues, as well as in normal and cirrhotic liver samples. We found that both c-Met and MUC1 expression were increased during hepatocarcinogenesis and correlated with the differentiation status of HCC tissues

  • Both MUC1 and c-Met are overexpressed in poorlydifferentiated HCC cell lines When we analyzed the expression of MUC1 and c-Met receptor tyrosine kinase in HCC cell lines, the cell lines fell into two groups based on the two expression profiles

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Summary

Introduction

Hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) induced c-Met activation is known as the main stimulus for hepatocyte proliferation and is essential for liver development and regeneration. HGF acts on c-Met, a high affinity tyrosine kinase receptor, and mediates several cellular behaviors including cell survival, proliferation, migration morphogenesis, and angiogenesis [7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21] Both c-Met and HGF are overexpressed during liver development and it is known that the signal elicited through binding of HGF to c-Met is one of the main stimuli for the G1-S progression in hepatocytes [13]. A severe impairment of liver regeneration in the conditional c-Met mutant mice has been reported [14]

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