. We have investigated ADAM expression in human liver cancers and their regulation by several cytokines involved in liver injury. Using degenerative RT-PCR, cDNA encoding sequences for ADAM9 and ADAM12 were identified in human activated hepatic stellate cells (HSCs). Northern blot analyses showed that HSCs, but not hepatocytes, expressed transcripts for ADAM9 messenger RNA (mRNA) and both the long and short forms of ADAM12. This expression was associated with the transition from quiescent to activated state of rat HSCs and markedly increased in human livers with cirrhosis. ADAM12 but not ADAM9 expression was up-regulated by transforming growth factor  (TGF-) in human activated HSCs. The PI3K inhibitor LY294002 and the mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase (MEK) inhibitor UO126 prevented ADAM12 induction by TGF-, suggesting the involvement of PI3K and MEK activities. In vivo, the steady-state of both ADAM9 and ADAM12 mRNA levels was nearly undetectable in both normal livers and benign tumors and increased in hepatocellular carcinomas (up to 3-and 6-fold, respectively) and liver metastases from colonic carcinomas (up to 40-and 60-fold, respectively). The up-regulation of both ADAM9 and ADAM12 was correlated with an increase in matrix metalloproteinase 2 expression and activity. In conclusion, in liver cancers ADAM9 and ADAM12 expression is associated with tumor aggressiveness and progression. I ncreased expression and activities of matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) has been shown widely in malignant phenotypes facilitating the breakdown of extracellular matrix component and cell evasion, but also unmasking bioactive cryptic fragments and releasing active growth factors which, in turn, favor tumor growth. 1 The ADAMs (a disintegrin and metalloproteinase-containing proteins) are a family of multidomain glycoproteins highly homologous to the class III snake venom metalloprotease-disintegrins. 2 The common extracellular part of the proteins includes a regulatory prodomain and metalloprotease, disintegrin-like and cystein-rich domains. Further, ADAMs are characterized by an epidermal growth factor (EGF)-like domain, a transmembrane domain, and a cytoplasmic tail. More than 30 members have been identified in the ADAM family with a broad tissue distribution and have been involved in specific cellular processes including sperm-egg interaction, 3 myocyte fusion, 4 neurogenesis, 5 and adipogenesis. 6 Recently, ADAM12 gene therapy was shown to rescue the pathology of mdx-gene deficient dystrophic mice.
Hepatocellular carcinomas (HCCs) exhibit a diversity of molecular phenotypes, raising major challenges in clinical management. HCCs detected by surveillance programs at an early stage are candidates for potentially curative therapies (local ablation, resection, or transplantation). In the long term, transplantation provides the lowest recurrence rates. Treatment allocation is based on tumor number, size, vascular invasion, performance status, functional liver reserve, and the prediction of early (<2 years) recurrence, which reflects the intrinsic aggressiveness of the tumor. Well‐differentiated, potentially low‐aggressiveness tumors form the heterogeneous molecular class of nonproliferative HCCs, characterized by an approximate 50% β‐catenin mutation rate. To define the clinical, pathological, and molecular features and the outcome of nonproliferative HCCs, we constructed a 1,133‐HCC transcriptomic metadata set and validated findings in a publically available 210‐HCC RNA sequencing set. We show that nonproliferative HCCs preserve the zonation program that distributes metabolic functions along the portocentral axis in normal liver. More precisely, we identified two well‐differentiated, nonproliferation subclasses, namely periportal‐type (wild‐type β‐catenin) and perivenous‐type (mutant β‐catenin), which expressed negatively correlated gene networks. The new periportal‐type subclass represented 29% of all HCCs; expressed a hepatocyte nuclear factor 4A–driven gene network, which was down‐regulated in mouse hepatocyte nuclear factor 4A knockout mice; were early‐stage tumors by Barcelona Clinic Liver Cancer, Cancer of the Liver Italian Program, and tumor–node–metastasis staging systems; had no macrovascular invasion; and showed the lowest metastasis‐specific gene expression levels and TP53 mutation rates. Also, we identified an eight‐gene periportal‐type HCC signature, which was independently associated with the highest 2‐year recurrence‐free survival by multivariate analyses in two independent cohorts of 247 and 210 patients. Conclusion: Well‐differentiated HCCs display mutually exclusive periportal or perivenous zonation programs. Among all HCCs, periportal‐type tumors have the lowest intrinsic potential for early recurrence after curative resection. (Hepatology 2017;66:1502–1518).
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