Inflammatory Micro-environment Contributes to Stemness Properties and Metastatic Potential of HCC via the NF-κB/miR-497/SALL4 Axis
Author(s) -
Bixing Zhao,
Yingchao Wang,
Xionghong Tan,
Kun Ke,
Xiaoyuan Zheng,
Fei Wang,
Shubing Lan,
Naishun Liao,
Zhixiong Cai,
Yingjun Shi,
Youshi Zheng,
Yongping Lai,
Lili Wang,
Qin Li,
Jingfeng Liu,
Aimin Huang,
Xiaolong Liu
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
molecular therapy — oncolytics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.424
H-Index - 23
ISSN - 2372-7705
DOI - 10.1016/j.omto.2019.08.009
Subject(s) - nf κb , cancer research , medicine , inflammation
Increasing evidence has demonstrated the essential role of inflammatory micro-environment in tumorigenesis and tumor progression. Some cancer cells in tumor maintain typical stemness properties and, with the capacity of self-renewal, are thought to be crucial for the initiation and maintenance of tumors as well as their metastasis. Although both inflammatory micro-environment and stemness properties played crucial roles in tumor initiation and development, currently it is still unclear whether and how the inflammatory micro-environment promotes cancer stemness properties. Here, we show the first evidence that the inflammatory micro-environment promotes the stemness properties and metastatic potential of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) via the NF-κB/miR-497/SALL4 axis. We discover that miR-497 directly targets SALL4, negatively regulates its expression, and further inhibits the self-renewal and metastasis of HCC; more importantly, inflammatory factor TNF-α inhibits the expression of miR-497 via NF-kB-mediated negative transcriptional regulation and simultaneously upregulates the expression of SALL4 and promotes the self-renewal and metastasis phenotypes of HCC cells. Moreover, lower expression of miR-497 is significantly associated with poor prognosis in HCC patients. Taken together, our findings not only revealed a novel signaling pathway (NF-κB/miR-497/SALL4 axis) to connect inflammation with stemness properties, and clarified the molecular mechanisms underlying the inflammation-mediated self-renewal and metastasis phenotypes, but also provided novel molecular targets for developing new anticancer strategies.
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