Abstract
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is a highly invasive type of cancer. Metastasis is the leading cause of mortality of advanced HCC patients. In the metastasis cascade, cancer cells undergo epithelial-mesenchymal transition resulting in the loss of cell‑to‑cell adhesion, migration and invasion into the stroma. Loss of E-cadherin expression is a key molecular event in epithelial-mesenchymal transition through several regulatory mechanisms including epigenetic modification, regulation by inhibitory transcriptional factors and deletion of chromosome 16q24 locus. C-terminal binding protein1 (CtBP1) functions as a corepressor binding to several transcriptional factors and suppresses E-cadherin expression. We found that CtBP1 was upregulated in HCC when compared with paired normal liver tissues and was inversely correlated with E-cadherin expression in HCC by immunohistochemical assay using tissue array. Western blot analysis confirmed the results of the immunohistochemical assays. When CtBP1 was knocked down by siRNA in HepG2 cells (a human HCC cell line), E-cadherin was upregulated and the invasive ability of HepG2 cells was inhibited. In addition, following CtBP1 knockdown, the cell viability was decreased along with increased apoptosis rather than cell cycle arrest. These data suggest a pivotal role of CtBP1 in EMT of HCC, and its potential as a therapeutic target in human disease.
Highlights
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is one of the most lethal malignancies [1] ranking as the third leading-cause of cancer-Key words: C-terminal binding protein 1, E-cadherin, epithelialmesenchymal transition, hepatocellular carcinoma, invasion related mortality worldwide [2]
C-terminal binding protein 1 (CtBP1) is upregulated in HCC and is inversely associated with E-cadherin expression
CtBP1 acts as a tumor suppressor by binding to E1A resulting in restraint of tumorigenesis [19,20]
Summary
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is one of the most lethal malignancies [1] ranking as the third leading-cause of cancer-. The present study was conducted to further investigate the expression of CtBP1 and its target protein E-cadherin in HCC patient specimens, and the impact of the knockdown of CtBP1 on the biological behavior of HepG2 human HCC cells, with the aim to evaluate the role of CtBP1 in HCC
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