Abstract

Hepatocellular carcinoma highly occurs in chronic hepatitis livers, where hepatocyte apoptosis is frequently detected. Apoptosis is a mechanism that eliminates mutated cells. Hepatocyte apoptosis induces compensatory liver regeneration, which is believed to contribute to tumor formation. Hepatocyte-specific Mcl-1 knockout mice (Mcl-1Δhep mice) developed persistent hepatocyte apoptosis and compensatory liver regeneration with increased oxidative stress in adulthood but had not yet developed hepatocyte apoptosis at the age of 2 weeks. When diethylnitrosamine (DEN) was administered to 2-week-old Mcl-1Δhep mice, multiple liver tumors were formed at 4 months, while wild-type mice did not develop any tumors. These tumors contained the B-Raf V637E mutation, indicating that DEN-initiated tumorigenesis was promoted by persistent hepatocyte apoptosis. When N-acetyl-L-cysteine was given from 6 weeks of age, DEN-administered Mcl-1Δhep mice had reduced oxidative stress and suppressed tumorigenesis in the liver but showed no changes in hepatocyte apoptosis or proliferation. In conclusion, enhanced tumor formation from DEN-transformed hepatocytes by persistent hepatocyte apoptosis is mediated by increased oxidative stress, independent of compensatory liver regeneration. For patients with livers harboring transformed cells, the control of oxidative stress may suppress hepatocarcinogenesis based on chronic liver injury.

Highlights

  • Hepatocellular carcinoma highly occurs in chronic hepatitis livers, where hepatocyte apoptosis is frequently detected

  • We demonstrated that DEN-induced, B-Raf-driven, liver tumor formation is promoted by persistent hepatocyte apoptosis

  • We previously reported that persistent hepatocyte apoptosis causes gene mutations via oxidative stress, which is related to liver tumor d­ evelopment[18]

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Summary

Introduction

Hepatocellular carcinoma highly occurs in chronic hepatitis livers, where hepatocyte apoptosis is frequently detected. The strongest risk factor for HCC is chronic liver disease, a condition that is related to liver inflammation caused by exposure to one or several risk factors, including hepatitis B virus (HBV), hepatitis C virus (HCV), excessive consumption of alcohol, and metabolic ­syndrome[5]. In livers with chronic liver diseases, various factors, such as oxidative stress, ER stress, HCV core protein, HBx protein or genome integration by HBV, induce the malignant transformation of ­hepatocytes[8,9,10,11] These transformed cells should be eliminated by apoptosis to result in the suppression of tumor formation. It is unclear whether hepatocyte apoptosis eventually suppresses or enhances tumor formation in livers harboring transformed cells

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