| Literature DB >> 25071768 |
Mathias Gehrmann1, Melchiorre Cervello2, Giuseppe Montalto3, Francesco Cappello4, Alessandro Gulino5, Clemens Knape1, Hanno M Specht1, Gabriele Multhoff6.
Abstract
Members of the heat shock protein 70 (HSP70) family play an important role in assisting protein folding, preventing protein aggregation and transport of proteins across membranes under physiological conditions. Following environmental (i.e., irradiation, chemotherapy), physiological (i.e., cell growth, differentiation), and pathophysiological (i.e., inflammation, tumorigenesis) stress, the synthesis of heat shock proteins (HSPs) is highly up-regulated, whereas protein synthesis in general is reduced. In contrast to normal cells, many tumor entities including hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) overexpress HSP70, the major-stress-inducible member of the HSP70 family, present it on their cell surface and secrete it into the extracellular milieu. Herein, the prognostic relevance of serum HSP70 levels in patients with chronic hepatitis (CH; n = 50), liver cirrhosis (LC; n = 46), and HCC (n = 47) was analyzed. Similar to other tumor entities, HSP70 is also present on the surface of primary HCC cells. The staining intensity of intracellular HSP70 in HCC tissue is stronger compared to control and cirrhotic liver sections. HSP70 serum levels in all HCC patients were significantly higher compared to a control group without liver disease (n = 40). No significant age- and gender-related differences in HSP70 serum levels were observed in male and female healthy human volunteers (n = 86). Patients with CH (n = 50) revealed significantly higher HSP70 serum levels compared to the control group, however, these values were significantly lower than those of HCC patients (n = 47). Furthermore, a subgroup of patients with LC who subsequently developed HCC (LC-HCC, n = 13) revealed higher HSP70 serum levels than patients with LC (n = 46, p = 0.05). These data indicate that serum HSP70 levels are consecutively increased in patients with CH, LC and liver carcinomas and thus might have a prognostic value.Entities:
Keywords: HCC; chronic hepatitis; inflammation; liver cirrhosis; prognostic biomarker; serum HSP70
Year: 2014 PMID: 25071768 PMCID: PMC4076752 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2014.00307
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Clinical and pathological features of control patients without liver diseases (CTRL) and patients with chronic hepatitis (CH), liver cirrhosis (LC), and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC); data are expressed as the median (range).
| Characteristics | Group 1 CTRL | Group 2 CH | Group 3 LC | Group 4 HCC |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number ( | 40 | 50 | 46 | 47 |
| Gender (M/F) | 36/4 | 30/20 | 24/22 | 27/20 |
| Age (years) | 44 (23–63) | 52.5 (25–85) | 66.5 (30–86) | 73 (45–87) |
| Albumin (g/dl) | 4.7 (3.47–5.01) | 4.66 (4.0–4.9) | 3.4 (2.0–4.5) | 1.03 (0.24–5.56) |
| Bilirubin (mg/dl) total | 0.72 (0.52–1.0) | 0.75 (0.34–1.1) | 1.27 (0.15–5.89) | 1.03 (0.24–5.56) |
| Aspartate amino-transferase (IU/ml) | 18.7 (12.0–26.1) | 55 (25.0–173.0) | 70 (19.0–377.0) | 56 (12.0–204.0) |
| Alanine amino-transferase (IU/ml) | 16.2 (11.5–22.02) | 85 (31.0–251.0) | 57 (12.0–221.0) | 45 (12.0–230.0) |
| International normalized ratio (INR) | 0.92 (0.86–1.01) | 0.97 (0.91–1.07) | 1.24 (1.06–1.73) | 1.06 (0.82–1.75) |
| HBs Ag | – | 2 | 4 | 3 |
| HCV Ab | – | 38 | 32 | 34 |
| Alcoholism | – | None | 3 | 5 |
| Cryptogenic | – | 10 | 7 | 4 |
| Dysmetabolic | – | None | None | 1 |
| A | – | – | – | 21 |
| B | – | – | – | 9 |
| C | – | – | – | 8 |
| D | – | – | – | 5 |
| E | – | – | – | 4 |
| A | – | – | 26 | – |
| B | – | – | 16 | – |
| C | – | – | 4 | – |
BCLC, Barcelona Clinic Liver Cancer group; HBs Ag, anti-hepatitis B surface antigen; HCV Ab, anti-hepatitis antibody.
Figure 1Representative images of a high (left) and low (right) HSP70 membrane expression on primary HCC cells. Single cell suspensions from freshly isolated HCC biopsies derived from two different patients were incubated with FITC-conjugated mouse monoclonal antibody cmHSP70.1 that recognizes the membrane-bound form of HSP70 on the surface of tumor cells. The white histogram represents the HSP70 membrane staining of the tumor cells and the gray histogram the staining with a negative control FITC-conjugated isotype-matched control antibody. The percentage of HSP70 membrane-positive cells was corrected by subtraction of the isotype control.
HSP70 membrane status in single cell suspensions of HCC tissue obtained from tumor patients.
| Patient no. | HSP70+ cells (%) | Mean fluorescence intensity (MFI) | HSP70 phenotype |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 62 | 429 | + |
| 2 | 95 | 1923 | + |
| 3 | 33 | 158 | + |
| 4 | 12 | 27 | − |
| 5 | 14 | 37 | − |
Figure 2(A) Representative immunohistochemical images of the HSP70 staining in control liver tissue (CTRL) and in the tissue of a patient with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) with an underlying liver cirrhosis (LC). The HSP70 staining intensity was stronger in HCC tissue compared to that of control liver tissue (CTRL) and in areas with liver cirrhosis (LC); left panel 10× magnification, right panel 40× magnification. (B) Semiquantitative analysis of the HSP70 staining intensity in sections of LC-HCC patients (n = 4) at a 10× magnification. The HSP70 staining intensity in the HCC regions ranged from very strong (+++), via intermediate (++) to strong (+); in the LC regions the staining intensity ranged between strong (+), weak (±), and very weak (−) in the four different sections.
Figure 3(A) HSP70 protein levels in the serum of male (n = 54) and female (n = 32) healthy human volunteers at different ages (n = 86). The HSP70 serum levels did neither differ significantly in male and female healthy human individuals nor in different age groups ranging from 20–39, 40–49, 50–59, 60–69, to 70–79. (B) HSP70 protein levels in healthy human volunteers (HEALTHY, n = 86), healthy controls without liver diseases (CTRL, n = 40), patients with chronic hepatitis (CH, n = 50), liver cirrhosis (LC, n = 46), and hepatocellular carcinomas (HCC, n = 47). Serum HSP70 levels did not differ significantly between healthy human volunteers and controls without liver diseases, but both groups differed significantly to patients with CH, LC, and HCC. (C) HSP70 protein levels in the serum of patients with liver cirrhosis (LC, n = 46) and of HCC patients with an underlying LC (LC–HCC, n = 13). Serum HSP70 levels were higher (p = 0.05) in patients with HCC and an underlying LC compared to patients with LC only. Serum HSP70 levels were determined by sandwich ELISA. Values were determined at least three times in duplicates. Median values are shown as box plots. Significance was calculated by using the Mann–Whitney-U-test (***p < 0.001).