| Literature DB >> 23229173 |
Alessandro Salvi1, Edoardo Abeni, Nazario Portolani, Sergio Barlati, Giuseppina De Petro.
Abstract
microRNAs (miRs) are 18-25 nucleotide non-coding RNAs that regulate gene expression in several physiological and pathological conditions. To gather more knowledge on microRNAs in human hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) we generated a small RNA library in the human HCC cell line HA22T/VGH by cloning and sequencing the cDNA obtained following the size selection of 18-24 nucleotide RNAs. We determined the expression levels of the most frequently cloned microRNAs by qPCR in HCC tissues and in their peritumoral counterparts from biopsy specimens of 41 HCC patients. The most frequently cloned miRs were miR-24, miR-27a and miR-21, and their expression levels in human HCC tissues indicate that these miRs were dysregulated in HCC. We showed that miR-24 and miR-27a were significantly downregulated in HCCs from cirrhotic liver tissues in comparison to those from non-cirrhotic liver tissues. In cirrhotic HCCs the downregulation of miR-24 was correlated with poorer prognosis in patients with HBV and HCV virus infections. miR-21 was generally upregulated in HCC tissues versus the corresponding peritumoral tissues, particularly in non-cirrhotic HCC. Furthermore, by sequence alignment we identified the human miR orthologue of Mus musculus miR-1199 not yet annotated. Our results outline the differential expression of miRs in cirrhotic and non-cirrhotic HCCs, thereby contributing to advances in the discovery and validation of novel molecular biomarkers of HCC progression.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23229173 PMCID: PMC3583619 DOI: 10.3892/ijo.2012.1716
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Oncol ISSN: 1019-6439 Impact factor: 5.650
Clinical and pathological characteristics of the studied population.
| Case | Gender | Age | Grade | TNM | Background disease | HBV | HCV |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 137 | M | 69 | G3 | T3bN0M0 | Active cirrhosis | NA | NA |
| 139 | M | 65 | G2 | T2N0M0 | Active cirrhosis | + | + |
| 140 | M | 69 | G2 | T1N0M0 | Aspecific reactive hepatitis | − | + |
| 145 | M | 65 | G2 | T1N0M0 | Steatotic hepatitis with portal and periportal fibrosis | NA | NA |
| 185 | M | 66 | G1 | T1N0M0 | Mildly active chronic hepatitis with steatosis of moderate level | + | − |
| 188 | M | 73 | G1 | T3bN0M0 | Cirrhosis with active chronic hepatitis | + | + |
| 191 | F | 63 | G1 | T1N0M0 | Cirrhosis with active chronic hepatitis | − | + |
| 197 | M | 70 | G2 | T1N0M0 | Cirrhosis with microvesicular and macrovesicular steatosis | − | − |
| 205 | M | 73 | G2 | T1N0M0 | Active chronic hepatitis | − | + |
| 211 | M | 51 | G2 | T1N0M0 | Cirrhosis with active chronic hepatitis with foci of macrovesicular steatosis and presence of iperplastic and regenerative macronodules | + | + |
| 218 | M | 64 | G2 | T2N0M0 | Cirrhosis with active chronic hepatitis | + | − |
| 219 | M | 57 | G1 | T1N0M0 | Cirrhosis with active chronic hepatitis | + | − |
| 224 | M | 55 | G3 | T3bN0M0 | Cirrhosis with active chronic hepatitis | + | + |
| 225 | M | 49 | G3 | T3bN0M0 | Microvesicular steatosis; focal lipofuscinosis; cholestasis | − | − |
| 227 | F | 72 | G2/G3 | T1N0M0 | Cirrhosis with active chronic hepatitis | − | + |
| 228 | M | 59 | G2 | T1N0M0 | Active chronic hepatitis of severe level with necrosis and bridging porto-portal fibrosis (HBsAG) | + | − |
| 229 | F | 79 | G2/G3 | T3bN0M0 | Cirrhosis with active chronic hepatitis | NA | NA |
| 235 | F | 82 | G3 | T2N0M0 | Cirrhosis with active chronic hepatitis | − | + |
| 236 | F | 76 | G1 | T1N0M0 | Cirrhosis with active chronic hepatitis | − | + |
| 237 | M | 68 | G2/G3 | T1N0M0 | Mildly active chronic hepatitis | − | + |
| 240 | M | 71 | G3 | T3bN0M0 | Active chronic hepatitis with necrosis and fibrosis ponte-portale | + | − |
| 242 | F | 63 | G2 | T2N0M0 | Active chronic hepatitis with focal and bridging porto-portal fibrosis | − | + |
| 241 | F | 38 | G2 | T3N0M0 | Reactive hepatitis | + | − |
| 257 | M | 69 | G1/G2 | T1N0M0 | Cirrhosis and hemochromatosis | − | − |
| 268 | F | 68 | G1 | T1N0M0 | Cirrhosis with active chronic hepatitis | + | − |
| 271 | F | 71 | G2/G3 | T1N0M0 | Cirrhosis with active chronic hepatitis | − | + |
| 272 | M | 65 | G1 | T2N0M0 | Cirrhosis with active chronic hepatitis and macrovesicular and microvesicular steatosis (30% of parenchyma) | − | − |
| 273 | M | 73 | G2 | T1N0M0 | Cirrhosis with active chronic hepatitis and mild macrovesicular and microvesicular steatosis | − | + |
| 274 | F | 81 | G2 | T1N0M0 | Mildly active chronic hepatitis with microvesicular and macrovesicular steatosis (30% of parenchyma) | NA | NA |
| 276 | M | 72 | G2 | T1N0M0 | Cirrhosis with active chronic hepatitis | − | + |
| 277 | F | 75 | G2 | T2N0M0 | Mildly active chronic hepatitis | − | − |
| 280 | F | 74 | G2/G3 | T1N0M0 | Mildly active chronic hepatitis | − | + |
| 281 | M | 74 | G2/G3 | T3N0M0 | Cirrhosis | − | − |
| 283 | M | 78 | G2 | T1N0M0 | Mildly active chronic hepatitis | + | − |
| 284 | M | 76 | G2 | T1N0M0 | Active chronic hepatitis | + | − |
| 285 | M | 77 | G2 | T2N0M0 | Active chronic hepatitis with necrosis ponte-portal of moderate/severe level | − | + |
| 286 | M | 69 | G3 | T4N0M0 | Active cirrhosis | − | + |
| 287 | M | 63 | G2 | T2N0M0 | Active cirrhosis | NA | NA |
| 288 | F | 64 | G2 | T1N0M0 | Active cirrhosis | − | − |
| 289 | M | 75 | G2 | T1N0M0 | Cirrhosis with iperplastic-displastic macronodules | − | + |
| 290 | M | 65 | G2/G3 | T1N0M0 | Active cirrhosis | + | − |
NA, data not available. Age, in years.
Composition of the small RNA population cloned in the HA22T/VGH library.
| RNA class | No. |
|---|---|
| miRNA | 118 |
| miRNA stem-loop | 4 |
| Partially homologous miRNAs | 3 |
| mRNA | 10 |
| rRNA | 8 |
| snRNA | 2 |
| Y RNA | 1 |
| Match with genome | 3 |
| Mitochondrial | 1 |
| Empty vector | 31 |
| Uncorrected sequencing | 19 |
| Total | 200 |
Sequences that are not homologous to mature miRNAs but match with a miRNA hairpin precursors.
Sequences that are partially homologous to mature miRNAs.
Sequences that do not form miRNA-specific hairpin precursors but match with genomic sequences.
List of the known miRNAs identified in the library.
| miRNA | Frequency | Genomic locus ( |
|---|---|---|
| hsa-miR-let7a | 1 | 9q22.31 |
| 11q24.1 | ||
| 22q13.31 | ||
| hsa-miR-let7i | 2 | 12q14.1 |
| hsa-miR-10a | 1 | 17q21.31 |
| hsa-miR-17 | 1 | 13q31.3 |
| hsa-miR-19b | 1 | 13q31.3 |
| Xq26.2 | ||
| hsa-miR-20a | 2 | 13q31.3 |
| hsa-miR-21 | 51 | 17q22 |
| hsa-miR-22 | 2 | 17p13.3 |
| hsa-miR-23a | 2 | 19p13.2 |
| hsa-miR-24 | 7 | 9q22.32 |
| 19p13.2 | ||
| hsa-miR-25 | 1 | 7q22.1 |
| hsa-miR-26a | 3 | 3p22.2 |
| 12q13.2 | ||
| hsa-miR-26b | 2 | 2q35 |
| hsa-miR-27a | 17 | 19p13.2 |
| hsa-miR-27b | 1 | 9q22.32 |
| hsa-miR-29b | 1 | 7q32.2 |
| 1q32.1 | ||
| hsa-miR-30b | 3 | 8q24.22 |
| hsa-miR-30c | 1 | 1p34.2 |
| 6q13 | ||
| hsa-miR-30e | 1 | 1p34.2 |
| hsa-miR-34b | 1 | 11q23.1 |
| hsa-miR-92a/b | 1 | 92a: 13q31.3; Xq26.2 |
| 92b: 1q22 | ||
| hsa-miR-92a | 3 | 13q31.3 |
| Xq26.2 | ||
| hsa-miR-93 | 1 | 7q22.1 |
| has-miR-99a | 1 | 21q21.1 |
| hsa-miR-181a | 2 | 1q31.3 |
| 9q33.3 | ||
| hsa-miR-224 | 1 | Xq28 |
| hsa-miR-324-5p | 1 | 17p13.1 |
| hsa-miR-365 | 3 | 16p13.12 |
| 17q11.2 | ||
| hsa-miR-424 | 2 | Xq26.2 |
| hsa-miR-1308 | 1 | Xp22.11 |
| hcmv-mir-US25-2 | 1 | Genoma CMV |
The sequence cloned did not allow the discrimination between the form a and the form b of miR-92.
Figure 1.(A) hsa-pre-miR-21 sequence. (B and D) The most frequent miR-21 sequences found. The most frequent variations at the 3′ terminus of the mature miR-21 resulted from A→I editing (4/51; 7.8%) and C→U (5/51; 9.8%) (C and E respectively).
Figure 2.miR-24 expression levels detected by real-time PCR in tissues from biopsy specimens from patients affected by HCC. The graph indicates the R (RQHCC/RQPT) corresponding to the human sample tested. The histograms are ordinated by increasing R. The background diseases are also indicated (LC, liver cirrhosis; O, other background disease i.e., B/C viral hepatitis, steatosis). The R values and the case number (LV) are listed under the graph.
Figure 5.Normal distribution of the R values (RQHCC/RQPT) of miR-24 (A), miR-27a (B) and miR-21 (C) detected by real-time PCR in tissues from biopsy specimens from patients affected by HCC. The black curve indicates the normal distribution of R in all cases tested, the dashed black and gray curves refer to the HCC samples with, respectively, the presence or absence of liver cirrhosis as background disease.
Figure 3.miR-27a expression levels detected by real-time PCR in tissues from biopsy specimens from patients affected by HCC. The graph indicates the R (RQHCC/RQPT) values of the human samples tested. The histograms are ordinated by increasing R. The background diseases are also indicated (LC, liver cirrhosis; O, other background disease i.e., B/C viral hepatitis, steatosis). The R values and the case number (LV) are listed under the graph.
Figure 4.miR-21 expression levels detected by real-time PCR in tissues from biopsy specimens from patients affected by HCC. The graph indicates the R (RQHCC/RQPT) values of the human samples tested. The histograms are ordinated by increasing R. The background diseases are also indicated (LC, liver cirrhosis; O, other background disease i.e., B/C viral hepatitis, steatosis). The R values and the case number (LV) are listed under the graph.
R values in cirrhotic HCCs subclassified in respect to hepatitis viral infections and the correlations between R values and overall survival.
| HBV (n=3) | HCV (n=7) | HBV/HCV (n=4) | −/− (n=4) | Pearson correlation (R vs OS) | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| R value (mean) | p-value | R value (mean) | p-value | R value (mean) | p-value | R value (mean) | p-value | Correlation coefficient | p-value | |
| miR-24 | 0.707 | 0.554 | 0.523 | 0.462 | 0.645 | 0.276 | 0.988 | |||
| miR-27a | 0.302 | 0.412 | 0.35 | 0.817 | 0.694 | 0.373 | 0.694 | |||
| miR-21 | 1.285 | 0.705 | 1.155 | 0.74 | 1.027 | 0.72 | 1.41 | 0.57 | 0.406 | 0.724 |
OS, overall survival. The bold numbers refer to significant p-values.
Figure 6.(A) Alignment of the human sequence cloned in the HA22T/VGH small expression library with the pre-mmu-miR-1199 (nt 7–34; miRBase accession no. MI0006307). (B) mFOLD input sequence corresponding to the human sequence obtained by BLAT analysis of the mouse sequence coding the mmumiR-1199 against the human genome. The part underlined is homologous to the mouse pre-miR-1199 sequence. (C) Predicted precursor hairpin structure of the input sequence indicated in B. The RNA secondary structure prediction was carried out using mFOLD version 3.2. The putative miRNA sequences are underlined. (D) The putative human miR-1199 and miR-1199* sequences are indicated. (E) Alignment of the candidate microRNA-1199 sequences with mammalian genomes. The region is well conserved among the mammalian species indicated.
Figure 7.Northern blot analysis of the putative hsa-miR-1199* expression. The mature miR-1199* was detected in the HCC cell lines SKHep1C3 and HA22T/VGH. It was also detectable as the precursor form (70–100 nt) of the miR-1199*. The expression of the small U6 RNA (45 nt) used as loading control is also shown.