Abstract

Liver cirrhosis (LC) is a complex disease that can develop into hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). In an effort to investigate genetic differences between LC and HCC, we used cDNA microarray analysis to characterize the gene expression profiles in LC and HCC tissues. Consistent differences were observed among the expression patterns in LC, HCC, and normal liver tissues. Interestingly, the expression patterns of LC without tumor association (LCT) were also readily distinguished from those of LC tissues near hepatic tumor tissues (near-tumor tissue, NTT). Moreover, 25 cirrhosis-specific genes could be used to divide the NTT samples into two groups: inflammatory active cirrhosis (NTTa) and inflammatory inactive cirrhosis (NTTi). We found that NTTa samples showed gene expression patterns similar to those of the LCT and HCC groups, whereas the expression patterns of the NTTi group were significantly different from those of the LCT, NTTa, and HCC groups. Finally, we selected two of the 25 LC-specific genes and showed that these markers could be used to successfully discriminate among the different LC subtypes. Collectively, these novel results allow the identification of new genetic subgroups of LC and provide new candidate genes for use as early markers for active cirrhosis and HCC.

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