| Literature DB >> 31892975 |
Xiaojia Liu1, Xianxian Sui2, Canjing Zhang3, Kelu Wei4, Yun Bao1, Ji Xiong1, Zhongwen Zhou1, Zhongqing Chen1, Chaoqun Wang5, Hongguang Zhu1,6, Feng Tang1.
Abstract
Glutathione S-transferase (GST) family members play an important role in detoxification, metabolism and carcinogenesis. The aim of this study is to investigate the effect of Glutathione S-transferase A1 (GSTA1) on the prognosis of HCC and to understand its role in tumor progression and the possible mechanism. GSTA1 in HCC was assessed using immunohistochemical staining, and it was found that HCC patients with better pathological differentiation had higher GSTA1 abundance. Further, high GSTA1 expression was correlated with low AFP, absent PVTT, and early stage TNM for HCC patients. Higher GSTA1 indicated longer overall survival and disease-free survival, while lower GSTA1 indicated poorer prognosis. Subsequently, lentiviral vector carrying GSTA1 gene was successfully constructed and maintained high expression in 97H and SNU449 liver cancer cells. We found that high GSTA1 restrained liver cancer cell proliferation, migration and invasion in vitro. Western blot showed that LKB1 and p-AMPK were upregulated while p-mTOR, p-p70 S6 Kinase and MMP-9 were downregulated in high GSTA1 groups. Taken together, high GSTA1 correlated with satisfactory prognosis of HCC. Additionally, GSTA1 may act as a protective factor through suppression of tumorigenesis by targeting AMPK/mTOR in HCC. © The author(s).Entities:
Keywords: AMP-Activated Protein Kinases; cellular proliferation; glutathione S-transferase A1 protein; hepatocellular carcinomas; metastasis; prognosis
Year: 2020 PMID: 31892975 PMCID: PMC6930411 DOI: 10.7150/jca.36495
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cancer ISSN: 1837-9664 Impact factor: 4.207
Figure 1GSTA1 decreased in HCC. A. GSTA1 is downregulated in HCC tumor tissues compared with para-tumor tissues, calculated by Image Pro Plus (IPP) Image Analysis Software (**P < 0.01). B. the protein level of GSTA1 is related to pathological differentiation of HCC. GSTA1 was highly expressed in well-differentiated HCC tumors, but decreased heavily and was almost absent in poorly differentiated tumor tissues. Representative photomicrographs showed immunostaining of GSTA1 in well (Left), moderately (Middle) and poorly (Right) differentiated HCC specimens (magnification, 50×, 200×, 400×). C. Deficiency of GSTA1 was detected in liver cancer cell lines, including HCC-LM3 MHCC-97H, SK-Hep1, SMMC-7721 and SNU-449, but not in HepG2 and PLC-PRF5, checked by western blot.
Correlation between GSTA1 and clinicopathologic features in 90 HCC patients
| Variable (missing cases) | Cases | GSTA1 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Low | Moderate | High | |||
| Gender | 0.524 | ||||
| Female | 20(22.2%) | 7(35.0%) | 7(35.0%) | 6(30.0%) | |
| Male | 70(77.8%) | 14(20.0%) | 37(52.8%) | 19(27.2%) | |
| Age/year | 0.271 | ||||
| ≤ 50 | 40(44.4%) | 12(30.0%) | 18(45.0%) | 10(25.0%) | |
| >50 | 50(55.6%) | 9(18.0%) | 26(52.0%) | 15(30.0%) | |
| HBsAg | 0.928 | ||||
| Negative | 19(21.1%) | 8(42.1%) | 9(47.4%) | 2(10.5%) | |
| Positive | 71(78.9%) | 13(11.2%) | 35(26.4%) | 23(43.1%) | |
| Preoperative AFP | 0.026* | ||||
| ≤ 400 ng/mL | 56(62.2%) | 7(12.5%) | 32(57.1%) | 17(30.4%) | |
| >400 ng/mL | 34(37.8%) | 14(41.2%) | 12(35.3%) | 8(23.5%) | |
| Tumor Number | 0.055 | ||||
| Single | 77(86.6%) | 16(20.8%) | 37(48.0%) | 24(31.2%) | |
| Multiple | 13(13.4%) | 5(38.5%) | 7(53.8%) | 1(7.7%) | |
| Tumor size | 0.307 | ||||
| ≤ 3 cm | 32(35.6%) | 5(15.6%) | 17(53.1%) | 10(31.3%) | |
| 3-5 cm | 22(24.4%) | 6(27.3%) | 10(45.5%) | 6(27.2%) | |
| > 5 cm | 36(30.0%) | 10(27.8%) | 17(47.2%) | 19(25.0%) | |
| PVTT | 0.005** | ||||
| Absent | 58(64.4%) | 9(15.5%) | 31(53.4%) | 18(31.1%) | |
| Present | 32(35.6%) | 12(37.5%) | 13(40.6%) | 7(21.9%) | |
| Differentiation | 0.026* | ||||
| Well | 9(10.0%) | 3(33.3%) | 1(11.1%) | 5(55.6%) | |
| Moderate | 45(50.0%) | 5(11.1%) | 27(60.0%) | 13(28.9%) | |
| Poor | 36(40.0%) | 13(36.1%) | 16(44.4%) | 7(19.5%) | |
| TNM Stage | 0.011* | ||||
| Ⅰ | 56(62.2%) | 6(10.7%) | 32(57.1%) | 18(32.2%) | |
| Ⅱ | 20(22.2%) | 11(55.0%) | 5(25.0%) | 4(20.0%) | |
| Ⅲ-Ⅳ | 14(15.6%) | 4(28.6%) | 7(50.0%) | 3(21.4%) | |
*P<0. 05, **P<0.01.
Abbreviations: GSTA1: Glutathione S-transferase A1. HBsAg: hepatitis B surface antigen. AFP: alpha-fetoprotein. PVTT: portal vein tumor thrombosis. TNM: tumor-node-metastasis.
Figure 2Higher GSTA1 indicated better OS and DFS in HCC. A. Patients with higher GSTA1 had longer OS and DFS, while lower GSTA1 indicated shorter OS and DFS (*P < 0.05). B. In single tumor number subgroup and TNM early stage subgroup, patients with high GSTA1 had long OS and DFS time (all *P < 0.05). The pathological grade I+II subgroup showed the same trend, but without statistical significance (P = 0.245 for OS and P = 0.193 for DFS, respectively).
Univariate and multivariate analysis for predictors of OS in 90 HCC patients
| Variables | OS | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Univariate | Multivariate | |||
| HR | 95%CI | |||
| Gender (Female | 0.234 | - | - | - |
| Age/year (≤ 50 ys | 0.180 | - | - | - |
| HBsAg (Negative | 0.932 | - | - | - |
| AFP (ng/mL) (≤ 400 | 0.000** | 2.641 | 1.387-5.025 | 0.003** |
| Number of tumors (Single | 0.022* | 2.174 | 1.036-4.560 | 0.040* |
| Tumor size d/cm (≤ 5 | 0.005** | 1.635 | 1.137-2.351 | 0.008** |
| Pathological grade (Ⅰ vs Ⅱ | 0.015* | 1.752 | 1.044-2.942 | 0.034* |
| PVTT (Present | 0.000** | 2.805 | 1.503-5.236 | 0.001** |
| TNM (Ⅰ vs Ⅱ | 0.000** | 2.566 | 1.721-3.826 | 0.000** |
| GSTA1 (Low | 0.036* | 2.675 | 1.853-4.192 | 0.047* |
*P<0.05, **P<0.01.
Abbreviations: OS: overall survival. HR: hazard radio. CI: confidence interval. HBsAg: hepatitis B surface antigen. AFP: alpha-fetoprotein. PVTT: portal vein tumor thrombosis. TNM: tumor-node-metastasis. GSTA1: Glutathione S-transferase α1.
Univariate and multivariate analysis for predictors of DFS in 90 HCC patients
| Variables | DFS | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Univariate | Multivariate | |||
| HR | 95%CI | |||
| Gender (Female | 0.725 | - | - | - |
| Age/year (≤ 50 ys | 0.150 | - | - | - |
| HBsAg (Negative | 0.847 | - | - | - |
| AFP (ng/mL) (≤ 400 | 0.016* | 2.257 | 1.230-4.139 | 0.009** |
| Number of tumors (Single | 0.002** | 3.361 | 1.621-6.969 | 0.001** |
| Tumor size d/cm (≤ 5 | 0.034* | - | - | - |
| Pathological grade (Ⅰ | 0.404 | - | - | - |
| PVTT (Present | 0.000** | 3.971 | 2.182-7.227 | 0.000** |
| TNM (Ⅰ | 0.000** | 3.664 | 2.453-5.473 | 0.000** |
| GSTA1 (Low | 0.040* | 2.113 | 1.927-5.044 | 0.046* |
*P<0.05, **P<0.01.
Abbreviations: DFS: disease free survival. HR: hazard radio. CI: confidence interval. HBsAg: hepatitis B surface antigen. AFP: alpha-fetoprotein. PVTT: portal vein tumor thrombosis. TNM: tumor-node-metastasis. GSTA1: Glutathione S-transferase α1.
Figure 3GSTA1 overexpression decreased liver cancer cell proliferation, migration and invasion abilities. A. CCK8 assay showed that GSTA1-transfected cells had decreased cell viability compared with empty vector control cells (*P < 0.05). B. Colony size and density in GSTA1 groups were smaller and rarer than those in control groups (*P < 0.05). The abilities of migration (C.) and invasion (D.) of liver cancer cells transfected with GSTA1 were decreased, which were detected by trans-well assays (*P < 0.05). Representative images were selected randomly from 5 fields (crystal violet staining, 400×) in each group and quantified by mean of five random fields. E. GSTA1 overexpression downregulated AMPK/mTOR. Western blot showed that GSTA1 protein was overexpressed in GSTA1-transfected liver cancer cells, indicating a successful transfection. In 97H and SNU449 cells, GSTA1 overexpression increased LKB1 and p-AMPK Thr172 protein expression while the total AMPK amount remained unchanged. Western blotting results indicated that p-mTOR 2448 decreased in cells overexpressing GSTA1, compared with controls. Besides, p-p70 S6K as well as MMP-9 were downregulated in the GSTA1 groups.