Abstract

Hepatitis B virus encoded X antigen (HBx) is a trans-regulatory protein that alters the activity of selected transcription factors and cytoplasmic signal transduction pathways. HBx transcriptionally up-regulates the expression of a unique gene, URG11, which in turn transcriptionally up-regulates β-catenin, thereby contributing importantly to hepatocarcinogenesis. HBx and URG11 also alter the expression of multiple microRNAs, and by miRNA array analysis, both were shown to promote the expression of miR-148a. Elevated miR-148a was also seen in HBx positive liver samples from infected patients. To study the function of miR-148a, anti-148a was introduced into HepG2 and Hep3B cells stably expressing HBx or stably over-expressing URG11. Anti-miR-148a suppressed cell proliferation, cell cycle progression, cell migration, anchorage independent growth in soft agar and subcutaneous tumor formation in SCID mice. Introduction of anti-miR-148a increased PTEN protein and mRNA expression, suggesting that PTEN was targeted by miR-148a. Anti-miR-148a failed to suppress PTEN expression when co-transfected with reporter gene mutants in the 3′UTR of PTEN mRNA. Introduction of anti-miR-148a also resulted in depressed Akt signaling by HBx and URG11, resulting in decreased expression of β-catenin. Thus, miR-148a may play a central role in HBx/URG11 mediated HCC, and may be an early diagnostic marker and/or therapeutic target associated with this tumor type.

Highlights

  • Chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection is associated with the development of hepatitis, cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC)

  • Results miRNAs Differentially Expressed by Hepatitis B virus encoded X antigen (HBx) or URG11 HepG2, derived from a human hepatoblastoma, expresses both wild-type and an activated mutant of bcatenin [26]

  • Given the centrality of HBx to HBV associated HCC [4], and that the HBx target, URG11 strongly stimulates hepatocellular growth and tumorigenesis [18], miRNA array analysis was conducted with HepG2X, HepG2URG11 and HepG2CAT cells to identify differentially expressed miRNAs

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Summary

Introduction

Chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection is associated with the development of hepatitis, cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). HCC is among the five most frequent cancers worldwide [1,2]. These diseases have few effective treatments [3]. One HBx up-regulated gene, URG11 [17], appears to stimulate hepatocellular growth by transcriptionally activating the b-catenin promoter [18]. This may be a part of the mechanism whereby HBx contributes to HCC [18]

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