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Allelic imbalances and homozygous deletion on 8p23.2 for stepwise progression of hepatocarcinogenesis
Author(s) -
Midorikawa Yutaka,
Yamamoto Shogo,
Tsuji Shingo,
Kamimura Naoko,
Ishikawa Shumpei,
Igarashi Hisaki,
Makuuchi Masatoshi,
Kokudo Norihiro,
Sugimura Haruhiko,
Aburatani Hiroyuki
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
hepatology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.488
H-Index - 361
eISSN - 1527-3350
pISSN - 0270-9139
DOI - 10.1002/hep.22698
Subject(s) - hccs , hepatocellular carcinoma , loss of heterozygosity , biology , locus (genetics) , liver cancer , comparative genomic hybridization , cancer research , allele , genetics , chromosome , gene
Abstract Early hepatocellular carcinoma (eHCC) originates from the hepatocytes of chronic liver disease and develops into classical hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). To identify sequential genetic changes in multistep hepatocarcinogenesis, we analyzed molecular karyotypes using oligonucleotide genotyping 50K arrays. First, 1q21.3‐44 gain and loss of heterozygosity (LOH) on 1p36.21‐36.32 and 17p13.1‐13.3 were frequently observed in eHCC, but not in chronic liver diseases, suggesting that such chromosomal aberrations are early, possibly causative events in liver cancer. Next, we detected 25 chromosomal loci associated with liver cancer progression in five HCCs with nodule‐in‐nodule appearance, in which the inner nodule develops within eHCC lesion. Using these chromosomal regions as independent variables, decision tree analysis was applied on 14 early and 25 overt HCCs, and extracted combination of chromosomal gains on 5q11.1‐35.3 and 8q11.1‐24.3 and LOH on 4q11‐34.3 and 8p11.21‐23.3 as distinctive attributes, which can classify early and overt HCCs recursively. In these four altered regions identified as late events of hepatocarcinogenesis, two tumors in 32 overt HCCs analyzed in the present study and one in a set of independent samples of 36 overt HCCs in our previous study harbored a homozygous deletion near the CSMD1 locus on 8p23.2. CSMD1 messenger RNA expression was decreased in HCC without 8p23.2 deletion, possibly due to hypermethylation of the CpG islands in its promoter region. Conclusion: 1q gain and 1p and 17p LOH are early molecular events, whereas gains in 5q and 8q and LOH on 4q and 8p only occur in advanced HCC, and inactivation of the putative suppressor gene, CSMD1 , may be the key event in progression of liver cancer. (H EPATOLOGY 2009.)