Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is one of the most prevalent and lethal cancers worldwide which lacks effective treatment. Cancer cells experience high levels of oxidative stress due to increased generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS). Increased antioxidant‐producing capacity is therefore found in cancer cells to counteract oxidative stress. The thioredoxin system is a ubiquitous mammalian antioxidant system which scavenges ROS, and we demonstrate that it is vital for HCC growth as it maintains intracellular reduction‐oxidation (redox) homeostasis. Transcriptome sequencing in human HCC samples revealed significant overexpression of thioredoxin reductase 1 (TXNRD1), the cytosolic subunit and key enzyme of the thioredoxin system, with significant correlations to poorer clinicopathological features and patient survival. Driven by the transcriptional activation of nuclear factor (erythroid‐derived 2)–like 2, the master protector against oxidative stress, TXNRD1 counteracts intracellular ROS produced in human HCC. Inhibition of TXNRD1 through genetic inhibition hindered the proliferation of HCC cells and induced apoptosis in vitro. Administration of the pharmacological TXNRD1 inhibitor auranofin (AUR) effectively suppressed the growth of HCC tumors induced using the hydrodynamic tail vein injection and orthotopic implantation models in vivo. Furthermore, AUR sensitized HCC cells toward the conventional therapeutic sorafenib. Conclusion: Our study highlights the reliance of HCC cells on antioxidants for redox homeostasis and growth advantage; targeting TXNRD1 resulted in dramatic accumulation of ROS, which was found to be an effective approach for the suppression of HCC tumor growth.
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the third most lethal cancer worldwide. Increasing evidence shows that epigenetic alterations play an important role in human carcinogenesis. Deregulation of DNA methylation and histone modifications have recently been characterized in HCC, but the significance of chromatin remodeling in liver carcinogenesis remains to be explored. In this study, by systematically analyzing the expression of chromatin remodeling genes in human HCCs, we found that helicase, lymphoid-specific (HELLS), an SWI2/SNF2 chromatin remodeling enzyme, was remarkably overexpressed in HCC. Overexpression of HELLS correlated with more aggressive clinicopathological features and poorer patient prognosis compared to patients with lower HELLS expression. We further showed that up-regulation of HELLS in HCC was conferred by hyperactivation of transcription factor specificity protein 1 (SP1). To investigate the functions of HELLS in HCC, we generated both gain-offunction and loss-of-function models by the CRISPR activation system, lentiviral short hairpin RNA, and the CRISPR/Cas9 genome editing system. We demonstrated that overexpression of HELLS augmented HCC cell proliferation and migration. In contrast, depletion of HELLS reduced HCC growth and metastasis both in vitro and in vivo. Moreover, inactivation of HELLS led to metabolic reprogramming and reversed the Warburg effect in HCC cells. Mechanistically, by integrating analysis of RNA sequencing and micrococcal nuclease sequencing, we revealed that overexpression of HELLS increased nucleosome occupancy, which obstructed the accessibility of enhancers and hindered formation of the nucleosome-free region (NFR) at the transcription start site. Though this mechanism, up-regulation of HELLS mediated epigenetic silencing of multiple tumor suppressor genes including E-cadherin, FBP1, IGFBP3, XAF1 and CREB3L3 in HCC. Conclusion: Our data reveal that HELLS is a key epigenetic driver of HCC; by altering the nucleosome occupancy at the NFR and enhancer, HELLS epigenetically suppresses multiple tumor suppressor genes to promote HCC progression. (Hepatology 2019;69:2013-2030).H epatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the major type of primary liver cancer and ranks as the third leading cause of cancer mortality. (1) The molecular mechanism underlying liver carcinogenesis is largely elusive but certainly is fueled by the gradual accumulation of various genetic mutations and epigenetic alterations. While recent whole-genome and exome sequencing studies have revealed the mutational landscape of many cancers including HCC, our current knowledge of cancer epigenetics
Hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection isHepatitis B virus infection is a global public health problem. An estimated 2 billion (one-third of the world's population) people are infected with HBV 1 worldwide, and more than 400 million are chronic hepatitis B (CHB) carriers (1). Epidemiological studies have shown that HBV infection is one of the major risk factors for chronic hepatitis, liver fibrosis, and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Every year, over 1 million people die of HBV-related liver diseases, 30 -50% of which are attributed to HCC (2). In China, more than 130 million (10% of the national population) people are suffering from CHB (3), and HCC has been ranked as the second major cause of cancer-related death since 1990 (4). However, the limited efficacy of antiviral therapies, high rates of post-treatment HBV relapse, and the emergence of drug-resistant viral mutants have greatly hindered the effective management of CHB infection. Therefore, it is of prime importance to understand the mechanisms of HBV-host interactions during malignant transformation in CHB infection to identify novel therapeutic anti-HBV targets.Because human HBV is incapable of infecting hepatocytes in vitro efficiently and the availability of reliable in vitro culture systems that favor HBV replication is limited, the pathogenetic studies of HBV and the development of anti-HBV drugs have long been hampered. HepAD38 and HepG2.2.15, both of From the ‡Stanley
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