| Literature DB >> 24923353 |
Chia-Chia Liu, Yee-Jee Jan, Bor-Sheng Ko, Yao-Ming Wu, Shu-Man Liang, Shyh-Chang Chen, Yen-Ming Lee, Tzu-An Liu, Tzu-Ching Chang, John Wang, Song-Kun Shyue, Li-Ying Sung1, Jun-Yang Liou.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: 14-3-3σ is implicated in promoting tumor development of various malignancies. However, the clinical relevance of 14-3-3σ in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) tumor progression and modulation and pathway elucidation remain unclear.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24923353 PMCID: PMC4061114 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2407-14-425
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Figure 114-3-3σ overexpression induces tumor growth. (A) A represtative expression of 14-3-3σ in a primary HCC tumor and in a negative control examined by immunohistochemical analysis. T: tumor; N: non-cancerous cells. Original magnification: ×200. (B) 14-3-3σ expression levels in HCC cell lines were determined by Western blot analysis. Actin was used as a loading control. (C) The rate of cell proliferation was determined by an MTT assay. Scale bars: mean ± SD.
Correlation of 14-3-3σ and HSP70 with clinicopathological characteristics in primary HCC patients
| Overall (n = 109) | 77.1% (84) | | 60.6% (66) | |
| Age | | 0.080† | | NS |
| < 60 years (n = 56) | 83.9% (47) | 66.1% (37) | ||
| ≥ 60 years (n = 53) | 69.8% (37) | 54.7% (29) | ||
| Gender | | NS | | 0.097† |
| Male (n = 82) | 79.3% (65) | 56.1% (46) | ||
| Female (n = 27) | 70.4% (19) | 74.1% (20) | ||
| Histology grade | | NS | | 0.060† |
| 1 (n = 7) | 71.4% (5) | 28.6% (2) | ||
| 2 (n = 77) | 74.0% (57) | 58.4% (45) | ||
| 3 (n = 25) | 88.0% (22) | 76.0% (19) | ||
| Types of surgery | | NS | | NS |
| Wedge resection (n = 39) | 69.2% (27) | 56.4% (22) | ||
| Segmentectomy (n = 54) | 79.6% (43) | 64.8% (35) | ||
| Lobectomy (n = 16) | 87.5% (14) | 56.3% (9) | ||
| Surgical margin | | 0.008* | | NS |
| Free (n = 83) | 71.1% (59) | 61.4% (51) | ||
| Involved (n = 26) | 96.2% (25) | 57.7% (15) | ||
| BCLC staging | | NS | | 0.079† |
| Not available (n = 5) | | | ||
| Early (stage A1 to A4) (n = 56) | 69.6% (39) | 51.8% (29) | ||
| Intermediate (stage B) (n = 46) | 82.6% (38) | 67.4% (31) | ||
| Advanced (stage C) (n = 2) | 100.0% (2) | 100.0% (2) | ||
| Tumor size | | 0.062† | | 0.062† |
| ≥ 5.0 cm (n = 34) | 88.2% (30) | 73.5% (25) | ||
| < 5.0 cm (n = 75) | 72.0% (54) | 54.7% (41) | ||
| Tumor multiplicity | | NS | | NS |
| Single (n = 84) | 78.6% (66) | 63.1% (53) | ||
| Multiple (n = 25) | 72.0% (18) | 52.0% (13) | ||
| Capsular formation | | 0.028* | | NS |
| Not available (n = 8) | | | ||
| Yes (n = 59) | 69.5% (41) | 57.6% (34) | ||
| No (n = 42) | 88.1% (37) | 66.7% (28) | ||
| Micro-vascular thrombi | | 0.001* | | 0.019* |
| Yes (n = 48) | 91.7% (44) | 72.9% (35) | ||
| No (n = 61) | 65.6% (40) | 50.8% (31) | ||
| Liver cirrhosis | | NS | | NS |
| Not available (n = 3) | | | ||
| Yes (n = 55) | 76.4% (42) | 58.2% (32) | ||
| No (n = 51) | 78.4% (40) | 64.7% (33) | ||
| Viral hepatitis | | NS | | NS |
| Not available (n = 7) | | | ||
| Hepatitis B (n = 54) | 79.6% (43) | 61.1% (33) | ||
| Hepatitis C (n = 30) | 70.0% (21) | 56.7% (17) | ||
| Both (n = 15) | 80.0% (12) | 60.0% (9) | ||
| None (n = 3) | 66.7% (2) | 66.7% (2) | ||
| Alpha-fetoprotein level | | NS | | 0.009* |
| Not available (n = 12) | | | ||
| ≧ 80 ng/ml (n = 35) | 80.0% (28) | 77.1% (27) | ||
| < 80 ng/ml (n = 62) | 74.2% (46) | 50.0% (31) | ||
| Subsequent extrahepatic metastasis | | NS | | NS |
| Yes (n = 29) | 82.8%(24) | 65.5% (19) | ||
| No (n = 80) | 75.0%(60) | 58.8% (47) |
BCLC, Barcelona-Clinic Liver Cancer; NS, not significant; Q-score, Quick-score.
*p < 0.05; †0.05 < p < 0.10.
Figure 214-3-3σ induces HSF-1 and HSP70 expression. (A) Increased expression of HSF-1 and HSP70 induced by 14-3-3σ stable overexpression was determined by Western blotting and (B) real-time PCR analysis. Lanes 1–4 indicate as 4 different stable clones selected from the single colonies. Scale bars: mean ± SD. (C) Transient transfection of 14-3-3σ overexpression induced HSF-1 and HSP70 expression. (D) Knockdown of 14-3-3σ with siRNA suppressed HSF-1 and HSP70 expression in 14-3-3σ stable cells and (E) SK-Hep1 cells. Expression of HSF-1, HSP70, 14-3-3σ and Flag was determined by Western blot analysis. Actin was used as a loading control.
Figure 3Correlation of 14-3-3σ expression with HSF-1 and HSP70 in HCC tumors. (A) Representative expression of HSF-1 and HSP70 in primary HCC tumors as well as negative control was examined by immunohistochemical analysis. Original magnification, ×200. (B) 14-3-3σ significantly correlates with HSF-1 and HSP70 expression in primary HCC tumors as analyzed by the Chi-square test.
Figure 414-3-3σ induces cell migration via an increase of HSP70 expression. (A) Migratory ability of control and 14-3-3σ overexpressed Huh-7 cells was determined by a Boyden chamber assay. (B) Knockdown of 14-3-3σ with siRNA suppressed cell migration in 14-3-3σ stably overexpressed Huh-7 cells and (C) SK-Hep1 cells. (D) Knockdown of HSP70 with siRNA attenuated 14-3-3σ-induced cell migration in stable cells and (E) SK-Hep1 cells. Scale bars: mean ± SD. *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01.
Figure 514-3-3σ induces HSF-1 expression via regulating β-catenin. (A) 14-3-3σ-induced HSF-1 expression was abolished by knockdown of β-catenin in stable cells and (B) SK-Hep1 cells. (C) 14-3-3σ-induced HSF-1 expression was attenuated by overexpression with wild type (WT) and constitutively activated (CA) mutant of GSK-3β. Expression of β-catenin, HSF-1, HSP70 and Flag was determined by Western blot analysis. Actin was used as a loading control. (D) Migratory ability was determined by a Boyden chamber assay. Knockdown of β-catenin with siRNA suppressed cell migration in 14-3-3σ stably overexpressed cells and (E) SK-Hep1 cells. Scale bars: mean ± SD. *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01.