University of Shanghai for Science and Technology
ORCID: 0000-0002-6177-1883Publishes on Cancer, Hypoxia, and Metabolism, Liver physiology and pathology, Hepatocellular Carcinoma Treatment and Prognosis. 124 papers and 4.5k citations.
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UNLABELLED: Increasing evidence has revealed the importance of cancer stem cells (CSCs) in carcinogenesis. Although liver CSCs have been identified in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) cell lines, no data have shown the presence of these cells in human settings. The present study was designed to delineate CSCs serially from HCC cell lines, human liver cancer specimens to blood samples, using CD90 as a potential marker. The number of CD90(+) cells increased with the tumorigenicity of HCC cell lines. CD45(-)CD90(+) cells were detected in all the tumor specimens, but not in the normal, cirrhotic, and parallel nontumorous livers. In addition, CD45(-)CD90(+) cells were detectable in 90% of blood samples from liver cancer patients, but none in normal subjects or patients with cirrhosis. A significant positive correlation between the number of CD45(-)CD90(+) cells in the tumor tissues and the number of CD45(-)CD90(+) cells in the blood samples was identified. CD90(+) cells sorted from cell lines and CD45(-)CD90(+) cells from the tumor tissues and blood samples of liver cancer patients generated tumor nodules in immunodeficient mice. Serial transplantation of CD90(+) cells from tumor xenografts generated tumor nodules in a second and subsequently third batch of immunodeficient mice. Treatment of CD90(+) CSCs with anti-human CD44 antibody induced cell apoptosis in a dose-dependent manner. CONCLUSION: Identification of CD45(-)CD90(+) CSCs in both tumor tissues and circulation suggests that CD45(-)CD90(+) could be used as a marker for human liver cancer and as a target for the diagnosis and therapy of this malignancy.
UNLABELLED: Chemoresistance presents a major obstacle to the efficacy of chemotherapeutic treatment of cancers. Using chemotherapeutic drugs to select drug-resistant cancer cells in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and several other cancer cell lines, we demonstrate that chemoresistant cells displayed cancer stem cell features, such as increased self-renewal ability, cell motility, multiple drug resistance, and tumorigenicity. Octamer 4 (Oct4) messenger RNA (mRNA) levels were dramatically increased in chemoresistant cancer cells due to DNA demethylation regulation of Oct4. By functional study, Oct4 overexpression enhanced whereas Oct4 knockdown reduced liver cancer cell resistance to chemotherapeutic drugs in vitro and in xenograft tumors. It is known that the Oct4-TCL1-AKT pathway acts on embryonic stem cells and cancer stem cells in cell proliferation through inhibition of apoptosis. We further demonstrate that Oct4 overexpression induced activation of TCL1, AKT, and ABCG2 to mediate chemoresistance, which can be overcome by addition of the PI3K/AKT inhibitor; therefore, a direct pathway of Oct4-TCL1-AKT-ABCG2 or a combination of Oct4-TCL1-AKT with the AKT-ABCG2 pathway could be a potential new mechanism involved in liver cancer cell chemoresistance. Moreover, the clinical significance of the Oct4-AKT-ABCG2 pathway can be demonstrated in HCC patients, with a strong correlation of expression patterns in human HCC tumors. The role of the Oct4-AKT-ABCG2 axis in cancer cell chemoresistant machinery suggests that AKT pathway inhibition (PI3K inhibitors) not only inhibits cancer cell proliferation, but may also enhance chemosensitivity by target potential chemoresistant cells. CONCLUSION: Oct4, a transcriptional factor of pluripotent cells, can mediate chemoresistance through a potential Oct4-AKT-ABCG2 pathway.
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is one of the most vascular solid tumors, in which angiogenesis plays an important role. The status of angiogenesis in HCC correlates with the disease progression and prognosis, and thus provides a potential therapeutic target. This review summarizes the vascular changes and molecular and cellular basis of angiogenesis in HCC. Development of HCC is characterized by arterialization of its blood supply and sinusoidal capillarization. Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) is a potent angiogenic factor that plays a critical role in mediating angiogenesis in HCC. The VEGF can function on various types of cells, such as endothelial cells, hepatic stellate cells, endothelial progenitor cells and hemangiocytes, to induce vascular changes in HCC. Therefore, blockade of VEGF-mediated pathways, either by anti-VEGF neutralizing antibody or tyrosine kinase inhibitors that target VEGF receptors, suppresses carcinogenesis and angiogenesis in HCC. In addition to VEGF, several other angiogenic factors in HCC have recently been identified. These factors can also regulate angiogenic processes through interaction with VEGF or VEGF-independent pathways. Despite the fact that treatment of HCC remains a tough task due to lack of effective systemic therapy, antiangiogenic therapy has already entered clinical trials in HCC patients and sheds light on a promising novel treatment for this disease.
The overall response rate for anti-PD-1 therapy remains modest in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). We found that a combination of IFNα and anti-PD-1-based immunotherapy resulted in enhanced antitumor activity in patients with unresectable HCC. In both immunocompetent orthotopic and spontaneous HCC models, IFNα therapy synergized with anti-PD-1 and the combination treatment led to significant enrichment of cytotoxic CD27+CD8+ T cells. Mechanistically, IFNα suppressed HIF1α signaling by inhibiting FosB transcription in HCC cells, resulting in reduced glucose consumption capacity and consequentially establishing a high-glucose microenvironment that fostered transcription of the T-cell costimulatory molecule Cd27 via mTOR-FOXM1 signaling in infiltrating CD8+ T cells. Together, these data reveal that IFNα reprograms glucose metabolism within the HCC tumor microenvironment, thereby liberating T-cell cytotoxic capacities and potentiating the PD-1 blockade-induced immune response. Our findings suggest that IFNα and anti-PD-1 cotreatment is an effective novel combination strategy for patients with HCC. SIGNIFICANCE: Our study supports a role of tumor glucose metabolism in IFNα-mediated antitumor immunity in HCC, and tumor-infiltrating CD27+CD8+ T cells may be a promising biomarker for stratifying patients for anti-PD-1 therapy. See related commentary by Kao et al., p. 1615. This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 1599.