Abstract

BackgroundCopine1 (CPNE1), the first discovered CPNE1 family member, participates in the process of carcinogenesis and development of diverse tumors. Our study aimed to investigate the expression and prognostic value of CPNE1 gene in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), to explore its functional network in HCC and its effects on biological behaviors.MethodsHCCDB, CCLE, HPA and LinkedOmics online databases were used to explore the expression of CPNE1 gene and analyze the co-expression network of CPNE1 in hepatocellular carcinoma. Gene set enrichment analysis (GSEA) was used for GO functional annotation, KEGG pathway enrichment analysis and regulators of CPNE1 networks in LIHC. HepG2 and MHCC-97H cells were selected to construct CPNE1 knockdown cell lines by transfection with siRNA, and Hep3B cell was selected to construct CPNE1 overexpression cell line by transfection with plasmid. The effect of CPNE1 on the proliferation of hepatocellular carcinoma cells was examined by CCK8 assay and clone formation assay; the effect of CPNE1 on the migration ability of hepatocellular carcinoma cells was assessed by cell scratch assay and Transwell cell migration assay; finally, the expression of related signaling pathway proteins was examined by Western Blot. The correlation of CPNE1 expression with immune infiltration and immune checkpoint molecules in HCC tissues was analyzed using TIMER online database and GSEA.ResultsCPNE1 was highly expressed in HCC tissues and significantly correlated with sex, age, cancer stage and tumor grade. Overall survival (OS) was significantly lower in patients with high CPNE1 expression than in patients with low CPNE1 expression, and CPNE1 could be used as an independent prognostic indicator for HCC. Knockdown of CPNE1 gene inhibited the AKT/P53 pathway, resulting in decreased proliferation, migration and invasion of HCC cells. Overexpression of CPNE1 gene showed the opposite results. The level of CPNE1 expression in HCC was significantly and positively correlated with the level of infiltration of B cells, CD8+ T cells, CD4+ T cells, macrophages, neutrophils, and dendritic cells (P < 0.001). GSEA results also showed that CPNE1 of LIHC was involved in some immune response regulating signaling pathways.ConclusionsOur study firstly found the expression of CPNE1 was significantly higher in LIHC tissues than in normal liver tissues, and high CPNE1 expression was associated with poor prognosis. In addition, we identified the possible mechanism by which CPNE1 functioned in LIHC. CPNE1 influenced AKT/P53 pathway activation and LIHC cell proliferation and migration. There was a significant correlation between CPNE1 expression and tumor immune infiltration in LIHC.

Highlights

  • Liver cancer, one of the top five deadliest cancers globally, has the high mortality [1, 2]

  • Su et al Cancer Cell International (2022) 22:67 mechanism by which CPNE1 functioned in Liver hepatocellular carcinoma (LIHC)

  • There was a significant correlation between CPNE1 expression and tumor immune infiltration in LIHC

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Summary

Introduction

One of the top five deadliest cancers globally, has the high mortality [1, 2]. Liver hepatocellular carcinoma (LIHC), the major histology subtype of primary liver cancer, accounts for 70–80% proportion of total liver cancer cases and is related to hepatitis C virus (HCV), hepatitis B virus (HBV) and alcoholism [3, 4]. Advanced LIHC exists multiple treatments, including surgical excision, transarterial embolization, chemotherapy and radiofrequency ablation, the treatments effects are limited and LIHC still has a rate of recurrence as high as 70% [5, 6]. Despite the risk factors (HBV, HCV, alcohol-related cirrhosis, smoking, diabetes, fatty liver disease, obesity, iron overload and multiple diet exposure) of LIHC is well known, the precise mechanism underlying development and progression of LIHC remains unclear [7, 8]. Our study aimed to investigate the expression and prognostic value of CPNE1 gene in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), to explore its functional network in HCC and its effects on biological behaviors

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