Wnt/β-Catenin Signaling Contributes to Activation of Normal and Tumorigenic Liver Progenitor Cells

Wen Yang(Second Military Medical University), He‐Xin Yan(Second Military Medical University), Lei Chen(Second Military Medical University), Qiong Liu(Second Military Medical University), Yaqin He(Second Military Medical University), Le‐Xing Yu(Second Military Medical University), Shuhui Zhang(Second Military Medical University), Dandan Huang(Second Military Medical University), Liang Tang(Second Military Medical University), Xiaoni Kong(Second Military Medical University), Chao Chen(Second Military Medical University), Shuqin Liu(Second Military Medical University), Mengchao Wu(Second Military Medical University), Hongyang Wang(Second Military Medical University)
Cancer Research
June 1, 2008
Cited by 377Open Access
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Abstract

Adult hepatic progenitor (oval) cells are facultative stem cells in liver, which participate in a range of human liver diseases, including hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). However, the molecular pathways regulating the expansion and differentiation of these cells are poorly understood. We show that active Wnt/beta-catenin signaling occurs preferentially within the oval cell population, and forced expression of constitutively active beta-catenin mutant promotes expansion of the oval cell population in the regenerated liver. More importantly, we identify a subpopulation of less differentiated progenitor-like cells in HCC cell lines and primary HCC tissues, which are defined by expression of the hepatic progenitor marker OV6 and endowed with endogenously active Wnt/beta-catenin signaling. These OV6(+) HCC cells possess a greater ability to form tumor in vivo and show a substantial resistance to standard chemotherapy compared with OV6(-) tumor cells. The fraction of tumor cells expressing OV6 is enriched after Wnt pathway activation, whereas inhibition of beta-catenin signaling leads to a decrease in the proportion of OV6(+) cells. In addition, the chemoresistance of OV6(+) HCC progenitor-like cells can be reversed by lentivirus-delivered stable expression of microRNA targeting beta-catenin. These results highlight the importance of the Wnt/beta-catenin pathway in activation and expansion of oval cells in normal rodent models and human HCCs. OV6(+) tumor cells may represent the cellular population that confers HCC chemoresistance, and therapies targeted to the Wnt/beta-catenin signaling may provide a specific method to disrupt this resistance mechanism to improve overall tumor control with chemotherapy.


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