| Literature DB >> 34149910 |
Mei-Juan Dian1,2, Jing Li3, Xiao-Ling Zhang4, Zi-Jian Li1, Ying Zhou1, Wei Zhou1, Qiu-Ling Zhong5, Wen-Qian Pang1, Xiao-Lin Lin1, Tao Liu1, Yi-An Liu1, Yong-Long Li2, Liu-Xin Han6, Wen-Tao Zhao7, Jun-Shuang Jia1, Sheng-Jun Xiao8, Dong Xiao1,2, Jia-Wei Xia6, Wei-Chao Hao9.
Abstract
Background: Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is one of the most common cancers worldwide and has a poor prognosis due to the high incidence of invasion and metastasis-related progression. However, the underlying mechanism remains elusive, and valuable biomarkers for predicting invasion, metastasis, and poor prognosis of HCC patients are still lacking.Entities:
Keywords: EMT; Hepatocellular carcinoma; MST4; Metastasis; PI3K/AKT; Prognosis; Snail1
Year: 2021 PMID: 34149910 PMCID: PMC8210547 DOI: 10.7150/jca.60008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cancer ISSN: 1837-9664 Impact factor: 4.207
Figure 1Low MST4 expression correlates with HCC progression and poor prognosis. (A) Representative images of MST4 immunohistochemical (IHC) staining in HCC specimens (n=325) with different TNM stages. (B) The percentages of cases with high or low expression of MST4 according to different TNM stages of HCC. (C) Representative images of MST4 IHC staining in HCC specimens (n=325) with different clinical stages and histological grades. (D) The percentages of cases with high or low expression of MST4 according to different clinical stages and histological grades of HCC. (E) Kaplan-Meier survival curves of overall survival (OS) in 85 HCC patients with high MST4 expression (red line) and low MST4 expression (green line) (Log-rank test; P=0.021). (F) Univariate and multivariate analyses of prognostic indicators in HCC (n=85). (G) The correlation of MST4 expression with survival time for HCC patients stratified by clinical stage I-II (upper panel) (Log-rank test; P=0.725) and clinical stage III-IV (lower panel) (Log-rank test; P=0.005). Data are mean ± SEM (*P< 0.05, **P <0.01, ***P <0.001).
Correlation between the clinicopathological features and MST4 expression in 325 HCC tissue specimens
| Variables | Case No. | MST4 expression | χ2 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (n) | High (n, %) | Low (n, %) | |||
| Female | 60 | 20 (33.3) | 40 (66.7) | 0.745 | 0.38 |
| Male | 265 | 107 (40.4) | 158 (59.6) | ||
| <50 | 158 | 57 (36.1) | 101 (63.9) | 0.931 | 0.307 |
| ≥50 | 167 | 70 (41.9) | 97 (58.1) | ||
| I-II | 97 | 60 (61.9) | 37 (38.1) | 28.79 | |
| III-IV | 228 | 67 (29.4) | 161 (70.6) | ||
| T1-T2 | 225 | 99 (44.0) | 126 (56.0) | 6.788 | |
| T3-T4 | 100 | 28 (28.0) | 72 (72.0) | ||
| N0 | 305 | 124 (40.7) | 181 (59.3) | 5.189 | |
| N1 | 20 | 3 (15.0) | 17 (85.0) | ||
| M0 | 313 | 125 (39.9) | 188 (60.1) | 2.629 | 0.136 |
| M1 | 12 | 2 (16.7) | 10 (83.3) | ||
| I-II | 208 | 97 (46.6) | 111 (53.4) | 13 | |
| III-IV | 117 | 30 (25.6) | 87 (74.4) | ||
T: tumor size; N: lymph node metastasis; M: distant metastasis.
Figure 2MST4 negatively regulates HCC cell migration, invasion, and intrahepatic metastasis (IM) Representative photographs of the migratory and invasive properties of dnMST4-expressing Bel-7402 and Bel-7404 cells. (B) Quantification of migratory and invasive properties of dnMST4-expressing Bel-7402 and Bel-7404 cells. (C) Representative images of the migratory and invasive properties of MST4-overexpressing Bel-7402 and Bel-7404 cells. (D) Quantification of migratory and invasive properties of MST4-overexpressing HCC cells. (E) Representative pictures of the livers from nude mice after subcapsular liver transplantation of vector-expressing (LV-con) or dnMST4-expressing (LV-dnMST4) Bel-7402 cells (7 mice/group). Photographs were recorded under natural light (upper panel) or under fluorescent stereomicroscope (lower panel). (F) The diameter of the primary tumors in the livers of nude mice. (G) The number of IM nodules in the livers of nude mice. (H) Representative H&E staining of liver tissue samples from nude mice after subcapsular liver transplantation of vector- or dnMST4-expressing Bel-7402 cells. (a and b) primary tumor, (c) satellite nodules near the primary tumor lesion, (d) vascular invasion, (e) lymph node metastasis, and (f) peripheral nerve invasion. P: primary tumor; M: metastatic nodule. (I) Survival curve of nude mice transplanted with vector- (bule line) or dnMST4-expressing (red line) Bel-7402 cells into hepatic subcapsular space. Data are mean ± SEM (*P< 0.05, **P <0.01, ***P <0.001).
Figure 3MST4 represses EMT in HCC cells. (A) Phase-contrast micrograph of the morphology of vector- or dnMST4-expressing Bel-7402 cells and Bel-7404 cells. (B) Western blot analysis for the detection of the indicated protein expression in dnMST4-expressing Bel-7402 cells and Bel-7404 cells. (C) Western blot analysis for the detection of the indicated protein expression in MST4-overexpressing Bel-7402 cells and Bel-7404 cells. (D) Immunofluorescence images showing the expression of EMT marker proteins of dnMST4-expressing Bel-7402 cells. Blue: DAPI. Scale bar, 20 µm. (E) Representative pictures of tumorsphere in dnMST4-expressing and MST4-overexpressing Huh7 cells. (F) The number of tumorspheres in dnMST4-expressing and MST4-overexpressing Huh7 cells. (G) Representative pictures of H&E and IHC staining for EMT markers in SHC specimens. (H) The number of cases with high or low indicated protein expression in SHC specimens. Data are mean ± SEM (*P< 0.05, **P <0.01, ***P <0.001).
Figure 4MST4 suppresses EMT and invasion of HCC cells through inactivation of PI3K/AKT/Snail1 signaling axis. (A) Western blot analysis for indicated protein levels in dnMST4-expressing Bel-7402 cells treated with or without LY294002 for 24 hours. (B) Representative images of migratory and invasive properties of dnMST4-expressing Bel-7402 cells treated with or without LY294002 for 24 hours. (C) Quantification of migratory and invasive properties of dnMST4-expressing Bel-7402 cells treated with or without LY294002 for 24 hours. (D) Immunoblot analysis of Snail1 protein levels in dnMST4- and LV-MST4-expressing Bel-7402 cells. (E) Representative immunofluorescence images for Snail1 levels in vector- and dnMST4-expressing Bel-7402 cells and Bel-7404 cells. Scale bar, 20 µm. (F) Immunoblot analysis of the expression of Snail1, E-cadherin and vimentin in vector- and dnMST4-expressing Bel-7402 cells with or without Snail1 knockdown. (G) Phase-contrast micrographs of the cell morphology of vector- and dnMST4-expressing HCC cells with or without Snail1 knockdown. (H) Representative pictures of the migration and invasion in vector- and dnMST4-expressing Bel-7402 cells with or without Snail1 knockdown. (I) Quantification of the migration and invasion in vector- and dnMST4-expressing Bel-7402 cells with or without Snail1 knockdown. (J) Western blot analysis of Snail1 expression in dnMST4-expressing Bel-7402 cells with or without LY294002. (K) Representative immunofluorescence images for Snail1 in dnMST4-expressing Bel-7402 cells and Bel-7404 cells with or without LY294002. Scale bar, 20 µm. Data are mean ± SEM (*P< 0.05, **P <0.01, ***P <0.001).
Figure 5The expression of MST4, p-AKT, Snail1, E-cadherin and Ki67 in human clinical HCC tissue specimens. (A-B) Representative images (A) of immunohistochemical staining for MST4, p-AKT, Snail1, E-cadherin and Ki67 in HCC tissues, and statistical analysis across 325 HCC specimens (B). (C) A proposed model of MST4 regulating the PI3K/AKT/Snail1 signaling pathway to modulate EMT, invasion and metastasis in HCC cells.
Correlation between MST4 expression and p-AkT level, Snail1 expression, E-cadherin expression & Ki67 in 325 HCC tissue specimens
| Markers | Case No. | MST4 expression | χ2 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (n) | High (n, %) | Low (n, %) | |||
| Negative | 207 | 98 (47.34) | 109 (52.66) | 15.421 | |
| Positive | 118 | 29 (24.58) | 89 (75.42) | ||
| Nuclear negative | 186 | 85 (45.70) | 101 (54.30) | 7.373 | |
| Nuclear positive | 139 | 42 (30.22) | 97 (69.78) | ||
| Low | 165 | 55 (33.33) | 110 (66.67) | 4.167 | |
| High | 160 | 72 (45.00) | 88 (55.00) | ||
| <30% | 86 | 50 (58.14) | 36 (41.86) | 16.778 | |
| ≥30% | 239 | 77 (32.22) | 162 (67.78) | ||