| Literature DB >> 33799862 |
Marinela Krizanac1, Paola Berenice Mass Sanchez1, Ralf Weiskirchen1, Anastasia Asimakopoulos1.
Abstract
Excess calorie intake and a sedentary lifestyle have made non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) one of the fastest growing forms of liver disease of the modern world. It is characterized by abnormal accumulation of fat in the liver and can range from simple steatosis and non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) to cirrhosis as well as development of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Biopsy is the golden standard for the diagnosis and differentiation of all NAFLD stages, but its invasiveness poses a risk for patients, which is why new, non-invasive ways of diagnostics ought to be discovered. Lipocalin-2 (LCN2), which is a part of the lipocalin transport protein family, is a protein formally known for its role in iron transport and in inflammatory response. However, in recent years, its implication in the pathogenesis of NAFLD has become apparent. LCN2 shows significant upregulation in several benign and malignant liver diseases, making it a good candidate for the NAFLD biomarker or even a therapeutic target. What makes LCN2 more interesting to study is the fact that it is overexpressed in HCC development induced by chronic NASH, which is one of the primary causes of cancer-related deaths. However, to this day, neither its role as a biomarker for NAFLD nor the molecular mechanisms of its implication in NAFLD pathogenesis have been completely elucidated. This review aims to gather and closely dissect the current knowledge about, sometimes conflicting, evidence on LCN2 as a biomarker for NAFLD, its involvement in NAFLD, and NAFLD-HCC related pathogenesis, while comparing it to the findings in similar pathologies.Entities:
Keywords: NASH; biomarker; cancer; fatty liver disease; hepatocellular carcinoma; lipocalin-2
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33799862 PMCID: PMC8000927 DOI: 10.3390/ijms22062865
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Aetiology and progression of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). In most cases, NAFLD is a consequence of sedentary lifestyle, a high fat diet, and excess glucose/fructose intake. While the state can be completely reversed with a lifestyle change or therapy, its progression is driven by pathological processes that result in histologically visible steatosis, ballooning, fibrosis, and cirrhosis. Each step is accompanied by immune cell activation while later steps include hepatic stellate cell activation. The end stage of this process can be hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC).
Figure 2Lipocalin-2 (LCN2) as a component in non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) pathology and diagnostics. NASH patients show elevated levels of LCN2 in urine, serum, and liver tissue, which makes it a potential biomarker for NASH. It is able to discriminate between simple steatosis (SS) and NASH, while the level of LCN2 correlates with inflammation (e.g., increase of CRP), insulin resistance, and fibrosis. It is induced by proinflammatory cytokines, high fat diet, glucose, and fructose overconsumption. Overexpression experiments have implicated LCN2 in the enhancement of lipolysis, fatty acid oxidation, mitochondrial activity, and immune cells crosstalk. In addition, LCN2 upregulation is associated with reduced de novo lipogenesis. All evidence points out that its role is hepatoprotective. However, the exact mechanisms are ought to be found.
Selected experimental and clinical findings associated with LCN2 in cancer models, tissues, and cell lines.
| Type of Cancer | LCN2 Expression | Model | Major Findings | Function of LCN2 | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| upregulated | A549 cells and MCF7 cells treated with MK886 | Apoptosis induced by treatment with MCF7 was accompanied by a dose- and time-dependent increase of | Data indicate that, although the induction of LCN2 correlates with apoptosis, induction represents a survival response | [ |
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| upregulated | siRNA knockdown in FRO | LCN2 is a survival factor for thyroid neoplastic cells. Data suggests that NF-κB contributes to thyroid tumour cell survival by controlling iron uptake via LCN2 | [ | |
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| upregulated in | Breast cancer cell lines MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 transfected with siRNA: Overexpression study on the same cell lines | Overexpression of LCN2 leads to an increase in mesenchymal factors (vimentin and fibronectin) and decrease in epithelial (E-cadherin). Silencing inhibits cell migration and reduces ER-α expression | LCN2 promotes breast cancer progression | [ |
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| upregulated | EC109, SHEE, SHEEC, EC8712, KYSE150, KYSE180, and TE3 | LCN2 increases MMP-9 and phospho-ERM (phospho-ezrin/radixin/moesin), decreases phospho-cofilin and cytoskeleton F-actin rearrangement in oesophageal squamous cell carcinoma cells | LCN2 promotes the migration and invasion of oesophageal squamous cell carcinoma cells through the ERK1/2 pathway | [ |
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| upregulated | HEY, PEO.36, SKOV3, OVCA433, and OVHS1 | Downregulation of | LCN2 is associated with an epidermal growth factor that induced EMT | [ |
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| high expression of LCN2 and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), high LCN2 serum levels in cancer patients | HHUA and RL95-2, and LCN2-low-expressing cell line HEC1B | Effects of LCN2 silencing on cell migration, cell viability, and apoptosis under various stresses, including ultraviolet irradiation and cisplatin treatment | LCN2 was involved in the migration and survival of endometrial carcinoma cells under various stresses in an iron-dependent manner. The survival function of LCN2 may be exerted through the PI3K pathway and suppression of the p53-p21 pathway | [ |
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| upregulated | SW620-OB, SW620-LCN2 (5 × 106), SW480-SHB, and SW480-sh-LCN2 cells were inoculated subcutaneously into the BALB/c nude mice | LCN2 blocked cell proliferation, migration and invasion in vitro and in vivo, and inhibited translocation of NF-κB into the nucleus | LCN2 suppresses metastasis of colorectal cancer | [ |
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| upregulated | Downregulation by shRNA | Depletion of | Downregulation of | [ |
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| upregulated | A highly significant increase of mRNA expression and protein secretion was shown in patients at diagnosis | LCN2 play an important role in the physiopathology of CML | [ | |
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| significantly downregulated in primary malignant and metastatic tissue | shRNA-mediated knockdown of | Knockdown increased oral cancer cell proliferation, survival, and migration. Silencing of | Downregulation of | [ |
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| upregulated | CAKI 1, 786-O, A498, and RCC4 cell lines were subjected to treatment with iron free or loaded LCN2 | Iron-free LCN2 reduced migration and matrix adhesion. In contrast, stimulation with iron loaded LCN2 enhanced migration and adhesion. | Iron load defines the pro-tumour characteristics of LCN2 in renal cancer | [ |
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| high in serum (ELISA) and tumour tissue | LCN2 overexpression in pancreatic cell lines. Cells were subsequently injected into the subcapsular region of the nude mice pancreas. | LCN2 overexpression (MIAPaCa-2 and PANC-1) significantly blocked cell adhesion and invasion in vitro, reduced Focal adhesion kinase (FAK) phosphorylation, potently decreased angiogenesis in vitro partly through reduced VEGF production | LCN2 acts as suppressor of invasion by suppressing FAK activation and inhibits angiogenesis partly by blocking VEGF | [ |
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| high in tumour tissue and serum | The mice experiment showed that LCN2 gene silencing inhibited the proliferation and tumorigenicity of the MGC-803 and SGC-79 | [ | ||
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| high in tumour tissue and cell lines | Knockdown of | LCN2 might play an important role in regulation of proliferation and invasion of human prostate cancer | [ | |
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| upregulated | Human RMCCA-1 cell line subjected to LCN2 downregulation by siRNA | LCN2 promotes the invasiveness of the cholangiocarcinoma cells by forming a complex with MMP-9 | [ |
Selected experimental and clinical findings associated with LCN2 in hepatocellular carcinoma.
| Species | Model/Sample | Experiment | Major Findings | Conclusions | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Serum from healthy individuals, patients with HCC or patients with cirrhosis | 300 subjects were subjected to routine laboratory tests | LCN2 levels greater than 225 ng/mL have a higher diagnostic performance in HCC patients and are more accurate in differentiation between cirrhosis and HCC patients than α-fetoprotein (AFP) | LCN2 is a good candidate for HCC diagnosis and screening | [ |
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| Tissue and serum samples from HCC patients and healthy individuals | Tissues were subjected to immunostaining and serum to Western blot analysis | Strongly elevated expression of LCN2 in diseased human liver instead of in a uniform pattern. All cells positive for either AFP or myeloperoxidase (MPO) were also strongly positive for LCN2. | LCN2 is pleiotropic, possibly participating in multiple functions in the tumor microenvironment, such as damage response, immunity, and differentiation | [ |
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| HepG2, Huh7, SK-HEP1, and J7 HCC cell lines | HepG2 and J7 cell lines were stably transfected with stably transfected TRα1, Huh7, and J7 cell lines overexpressing LCN2 | LCN2 is positively regulated by T3/TR. Overexpression of LCN2 enhanced tumor cell migration and invasion both in vitro and in vivo. LCN2-induced migration occurred by activating the Met/FAK cascade | T3/TR has a potential role of in cancer progression through regulation of LCN2 via the Met/FAK cascade | [ |
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| THLE-2, HepG2, Hep3B, PLC/PRF/5 (Alexander cells), SH-JI, and SK-HEP-1 cell lines | Adenoviral transduction of | Adenoviral upregulation of LCN2 causes the downregulation of epithelial-to-mesenchymal markers, while silencing reverses that effect | LCN2 negatively modulates the EMT in HCC through the epidermal growth factor | [ |
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| Huh-7 and SK-Hep-1 cell lines | Cells were transfected with plasmids encoding full-length LCN2 | LCN2 overexpression dramatically inhibited cell viability, induced apoptosis features reflected in cell-cycle arrest in sub-G1 phase, DNA fragmentation, and condensation of chromatin | LCN2 induces apoptosis in human hepatocellular carcinoma cells by activating mitochondrial pathways. | [ |
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| Urine of HCC patients, patients with chronic viral hepatitis and cirrhotic patients | Urinary LCN2 levels were measured by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay | Urinary LCN2 content can discriminate between HCC and cirrhosis | Urinary LCN2 is a possible diagnostic marker for HCC patients | [ |
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| 102 primary HCC tissues, 74 nontumor liver tissues, seven benign liver tumor samples, 10 metastatic cancers, and 10 HCC cell lines | DNA microarray analysis done on tissues and cell lines | LCN2 is one of the top 10 genes overexpressed in HCC | This research is a step to define new candidate oncogenes and therapeutic targets in HCC | [ |
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| 25 hepatocellular carcinoma patients, hepatitis C patients, and 25 healthy subjects as a control | Measurements for hepatitis B surface antigen, hepatitis C antibodies, AFP, MMP-9, TIMP-1, and LCN2 | Increased levels of LCN2 in HCC and HBV patients | LCN2 can be used as a future diagnostic marker with better sensitivity and specificity than MMP-9 for the progression of HCC | [ |
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| Tumor tissues from 138 patients who underwent curative resection of HCC | Immunohistochemistry on tumor tissues | LCN2 and NGALR are both upregulated in HCC tissues and are associated with vascular invasion, tumor, nodes and metastasis (TNM) stage, tumor recurrence, and overall survival | LCN2 and NGALR expression might be served as novel prognostic factors and potential therapeutic targets in HCC | [ |
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| HCC tissues and corresponding non-neoplastic liver tissues. Chang liver and SK-Hep1 human HCC cells | Tissue microarray experiment and analysis of | Significant increase in LCN2 levels in human HCC tissues compared with non-tumor liver tissues. Ectopic expression of LCN2 in HCC cells significantly inhibited the growth of HCC cells in vitro and in vivo, reduced the invasive potential of cells, and inhibited the expression of MMP-2 partly through JNK PI3K/AKT signalling. | LCN2 inhibits the proliferation and invasion of HCC cells through a blockade of JNK and PI3K/AKT signalling | [ |
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| 55 cases of biopsied tissues for HCC, liver cancer cells | Pharmacogenomic data analysis to discover drug–mutation interactions in cancer cells | Liver cancer patients non-responding to sorafenib treatment exhibit higher expression of extracellular sulfatase (SULF2) and LCN2. SULF2 mutation or inhibition enhances sorafenib sensitivity in liver cancer cells. | Diagnostic or therapeutic targeting of SULF2 and/or LCN2 can be a novel precision strategy for sorafenib treatment in HCC | [ |
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| Tissue and serum samples from mouse model of HCC | Western blot analysis and immunostaining | LCN2 overexpression in HCC livers in mouse liver, both in transcriptional and protein levels specifically in the tumoral area extracts | LCN2 is a pleiotropic protein, possibly participating in multiple functions in the tumor microenvironment, such as damage response, immunity, and differentiation | [ |
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| Implantation of tumors in nude mice | Mice were injected with | [ |
Figure 3LCN2 as a component in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) pathogenesis and diagnostics. In the pathogenesis of HCC, LCN2 is included in various signalling pathways that regulate processes as epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT), apoptosis, proliferation, and chemoresistance. Depending on the activated signalling pathway, it can either act as a tumor suppressor or promoter. Altered expression level of LCN2 in urine, serum, and tissue during the pathogenesis of HCC makes it a potential biomarker. It shows higher specificity in diagnosis of HCC than α-fetoprotein (AFP). LCN2 levels discriminate HCC from other non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) stages and can even predict patient survival. However, it cannot discriminate between early and late HCC.