ARTICLE
Received 2 Oct 2014 | Accepted 1 May 2015 | Published 16 Jun 2015
Yidong Yang1,2,*, Yunwei Guo1,2,*, Siwei Tan1,2, Bilun Ke1,2, Jin Tao1,2, Huiling Liu1,2, Jie Jiang1,2, Jianning Chen3, Guihua Chen2,4 & Bin Wu1,2
G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCR) constitute the largest known superfamily for signal transduction and transmission, and they control a variety of physiological and pathological processes. GPCR adaptor b-arrestins (ARRBs) play a role in cancerous proliferation. However, the effect of ARRBs in inammation-mediated hepatocellular carcinogenesis is unknown.
Here we show that ARRB1, but not ARRB2, is upregulated in inammation-associated hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and paracancerous tissues in humans. A genotoxic carcinogen, diethylnitrosamine (DEN), signicantly induces hepatic inammation, TNF-a production and ARRB1 expression. Although ARRB1 deciency does not affect hepatic inammation and TNF-a production, it markedly represses hepatocellular carcinogenesis by suppressing malignant proliferation in DEN-treated mice. Furthermore, TNF-a directly induces hepatic ARRB1 expression and enhances ARRB1 interaction with Akt by binding to boost Akt phosphorylation, resulting in malignant proliferation of liver cells. Our data suggest that ARRB1 enhances hepatocellular carcinogenesis by inammation-mediated Akt signalling and that ARRB1 may be a potential therapeutic target for HCC.
DOI: 10.1038/ncomms8369
b-Arrestin1 enhances hepatocellular carcinogenesis through inammation-mediated Akt signalling
1 Department of Gastroenterology, The Third Afliated Hospital of Sun Yat-Sen University, Guangzhou, Guangdong Province, 510630, China. 2 Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Liver Disease Research, Guangzhou, Guangdong Province, 510630, China. 3 Department of Pathology, The Third Afliated Hospital of Sun Yat-Sen University, Guangzhou, Guangdong Province, 510630, China. 4 Department of Hepatic Surgery, The Third Afliated Hospital of Sun Yat-Sen University, Guangzhou, Guangdong Province, 510630, China. * These authors contributed equally to this work. Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to B.W. (email: mailto:[email protected]
Web End [email protected] ) or to G.C. (email: mailto:[email protected]
Web End [email protected] ).
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ARTICLE NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | DOI: 10.1038/ncomms8369
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), the main form of liver cancer, is the sixth most common cancer and the third most frequent cause of cancer death worldwide1. The
exact mechanism of HCC initiation and development is still unclear, though inammation has been shown to play a key role in this progression2. Inammation-induced liver injury is a critical factor in the development of HCC. Two classes of inammatory response induce liver injury; one is virus hepatitis or microbial attack resulting in persistent inammation and the other is alcohol abuse, nonalcoholic steatohepatitis and drug-induced liver injury, which are associated with sterile inammation. Hepatocellular carcinogenesis has a strong connection with chronic hepatitis infection, induced by both hepatitis B and C virus, alcohol abuse or non-alcoholic fatty liver disease3,4. Progression from chronic hepatitis to hepatocellular carcinoma is characterized by inltration of immune cells and inammatory cytokine production5. TNF-a, one of the most important proinammatory cytokines, is produced predominantly by Kupffer cells and in part by neutrophils or hepatocytes during inammatory responses; this cytokine is critical for maintenance of chronic inammation2. The increased production of TNF-a may, in turn, augment the activation of inammatory cells and mediate the release of inammation factors, such as interleukin-1 (IL-1), IL-6 and intercellular adhesion molecule6. TNF-a has pleiotropic functions in inammatory progression depending on cell type or biological context7. In certain conditions, TNF-a induces apoptosis;
however, recent studies have indicated that TNF-a may promote hepatocellular carcinogenesis by activating a variety of signal pathways related to cell proliferation, differentiation and survival810. The mechanism of inammation linked to TNF-a and involved in hepatocellular carcinogenesis still needs to be fully elucidated.
Phosphatidylinositide 3-kinases (PI3K) are a family of enzymes involved in cellular functions such as cell growth, proliferation, differentiation, motility, survival and intracellular trafcking, which in turn are involved in cancer. Akt (now also called Akt1), a PI3K downstream target, is involved in cellular survival pathways by inhibiting apoptotic processes. PI3K/Akt can be activated in response to numerous cytokines, including TNF-a (ref. 11). Active Akt can protect cells from TNF-a-induced apoptosis and can facilitate cellular survival and proliferation12. Experimentally, Akt promotes proliferation in a variety of cell and animal models13. Akt is frequently induced in human HCC samples, and overexpression of Akt in mouse livers results in tumour development14,15. Disruption of the PI3K/Akt axis correlates with HCC growth arrest and/or apoptosis16. The mechanism of TNF-a-induced Akt activation in HCC is still unclear, and the interaction between TNF-a and Akt in HCC needs to be further investigated
A family of seven-transmembrane domain G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) constitutes the largest known superfamily for signal transduction and transmission17. GPCRs control a variety of physiological and pathological processes such as neurotransmission, pain, carcinogenesis and inammation18. Both conformational change and phosphorylation increase the afnity of the receptor for a small family of multifunctional GPCR regulatory or adaptor proteins known as the b-arrestins (ARRBs), including two superfamily members b-arrestin1 (ARRB1) and b-arrestin2 (ARRB2). This association blocks subsequent G protein activation and has an important role in traditional GPCR desensitization19. Several members of the GPCR family, including GPCR kinase-2 (GRK2) and ARRBs, have been implicated in the TNF-a-related inammatory reaction20,21. Hepatitis B virus (HBV) is one of the most common aetiologic factors of HCC. A high prevalence of HCC
arising from the background of HBV infection suggests that HCC paracancerous is an important precancerosis22. To analyse the possible association of GPCR family members with hepatocarcinogenesis, we performed a gene assay to screen the expression of GPCR family genes in liver tissues, including normal liver tissues, HCC paracancerous specimens and HCC samples with HBV-induced hepatitis. We found that ARRB1, but not ARRB2, was clearly upregulated in hepatocellular carcinogenesis. ARRB1 was originally identied as a signal terminator for GPCR signalling, but recent ndings demonstrate that ARRB1 serves as a scaffold protein and functions as a signal transducer by facilitating interaction of signalling molecules. A number of studies have investigated the role of ARRB1 in cancer, including leukaemia, colon, gastric and breast cancers23. ARRB1 can promote tumour angiogenesis by providing a suitable microenvironment in xenograft tumour progression24. ARRB1 also has been reported to play a role in cell proliferation, apoptosis and differentiation through several signal pathways25,26. Additional studies have shown that ARRB1 is involved in the activation of PI3K/Akt pathway and inuences apoptosis or cell survival23. However, the role of ARRB1 in hepatocellular carcinogenesis remains unknown.
In this study, our data show that hepatic inammation clearly induces TNF-a production and ARRB1 expression. TNF-a directly induces hepatic ARRB1 expression and enhances ARRB1 interaction with Akt through binding to boost Akt phosphorylation and PCNA upregulation, resulting in hepatocellular malignant proliferation and carcinogenesis. Our data suggest that ARRB1 is involved in hepatocellular carcinogenesis via inammation-mediated Akt signal, and TNF-a/ARRB1/Akt axis plays a critical role. The results indicate that ARRB1 may be a potential therapeutic target for HCC.
ResultsARRB1 is involved in hepatocellular carcinogenesis. HCC is an inammation-linked cancers in which inammatory cells and cytokines play a critical role. In this study, a small amount of CD68 and myeloperoxidase (MPO) staining was observed, indicating minimal macrophage and neutrophil inltration in normal liver tissues. In contrast, a large amount of CD68 and MPO was found in both paracancerous tissues and HCC samples, compared with normal liver tissues (Fig. 1a). The CD68 in paracancerous tissue was signicantly higher than HCC, whereas the MPO in HCC was clearly higher than that in paracancerous tissue (Fig. 1b). The results indicated that macrophage and neutrophil inltration was involved in hepatic carcinogenesis. Proinammatory cytokines, including TNF-a, IL-6 and IL-1b, were markedly induced both in paracancerous tissues and hepatocellular carcinoma, and their expression in paracancerous tissues was notably higher than that in HCC (Fig. 1c,d). A gene expression microanalysis was performed to screen for human gene expression alteration of the GPCR family among three normal liver tissues and three pairs of HCC paracancerous tissues as well as HCC tissues, which were characterized by HBV-induced hepatitis. We found that ARRB1, but not ARRB2, showed a distinctly higher expression in HCC paracancerous than normal liver tissues, but no signicant difference was found between HCC paracancerous tissues and HCC tissues, suggesting that ARRB1 may play a meaningful role in hepatocellular carcino-genesis (Fig. 2ad). Furthermore, at both mRNA and protein levels, ARRB expression was examined in 7 normal liver tissues,89 HCC, and their corresponding adjacent paracancerous tissues. Results showed that ARRB1 expression, but not ARRB2, was signicantly upregulated in paracancerous tissues and hepatocellular carcinoma, compared with normal liver tissues
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NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | DOI: 10.1038/ncomms8369 ARTICLE
6
4
2
0
6
4
2
0
Normal
Paracancer
HCC
*#
* #
*
*
H&E
CD68 index (%)
MPO index (%)
Normal
Paracancer
HCC
CD68 MPO Relative mRNA level
Relative ARRB1
mRNA level
Normal
Paracancer
HCC
16 Normal
Normal
14 12 10
8 6 4 2 0
Paracancer
*
#
HCC
mRNA levelTNF-
IL-6
*#
*
*#
* *
*
*
IL-1[afii9825] TNF-[afii9825] IL-6 ICAM-1 VCAM-1
IL-1[afii9826]
Paracancer HCC
*#
0.03
0.02
0.01
0.00
Relative ARRB2
0.03
0.02
0.01
0.00
*
Normal n =7
Paracancer n =89
HCC n =89
Normal n =7
Paracancer n =89
HCC n =89
Normal
Paracancer
HCC
Normal
Paracancer
HCC
ARRBI
ARRB2
-Actin
46
46
46 30
ARRB1 (IHC)
Figure 1 | ARRB1 is involved in inammation-mediated hepatocellular carcinogenesis in human tissues. (a) H&E staining (top), CD68 staining for macrophages (middle) and MPO staining for neutrophils (bottom), from human normal liver tissue, hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and its paracancerous tissue. Scale bar, 50 mm. (b) Index of CD68 (top) and MPO (bottom) positive cells in the liver was measured by counting 1,000 cells/sample. Values are means.d. (n 5 in each group), *Po0.05 compared with normal liver tissues, #Po0.05 compared with HCC using Students t-test. (c) Expression of
indicated inammatory cytokines mRNA in human normal liver tissue, HCC and its paracancerous tissue were analysed by real-time PCR. Values are means.d. (n 5 in each group), Students t-test used: *Po0.05 compared with normal liver tissues, #Po0.05 compared with HCC. (d) Representative
images of TNF-a (top) and IL-6 (bottom) immunohistochemical staining in human normal liver tissue, HCC and its paracancerous tissue. Scale bar, 50 mm. (e,f) ARRB1 and ARRB2 mRNA levels in human normal liver tissue, HCC and its paracancerous tissue were determined by real-time PCR. Values are means.d. (n 7 for normal liver, n 89 for HCC and its paracancerous group respectively), *Po0.05 compared with normal liver tissues, #Po0.05
compared with HCC by using one-way ANOVA test. (g) ARRB1 and ARRB2 protein expression in human normal liver tissue, HCC and its paracancerous tissue determined by western blotting assay. (h) ARRB1 and ARRB2 protein expression in human normal liver tissue, HCC and its paracancerous tissue determined by immunohistochemical staining. Scale bar, 100 mm.
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ARTICLE NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | DOI: 10.1038/ncomms8369
Normal Paracancer HCC
Gene expression in paracancer compared with normal liver tissues
GeneRGS1 Up
''Homo sapiens low density lipoprotein receptor-related protein 6'' ''Homo sapiens prostaglandin E receptor 4 (subtype EP4)'' ''Homo sapiens chemokine (C-C motif) ligand 18''
''Homo sapiens calcitonin receptor-like''''Homo sapiens purinergic receptor P2X, ligand-gated ion channel,7''
''Homo sapiens G protein-coupled receptor 162, transcript variant A-2''
''Homo sapiens G protein-coupled receptor 116, transcript variant 2'' ''Homo sapiens G protein-coupled receptor 78''''Homo sapiens arrestin, beta 2, transcript variant 1''''Homo sapiens chemokine (C-X-C motif) ligand 5''
Description Regulation
Fold change
Fold change
P
RGS1
TDRD1
CCR10
P2RY8
ARRB1
RGS10
PARD3
PTGER4
LRP1
LRP6
GPR162
CCL18
CALCRL
P2RX7
ARRB2
GPR116
CXCL5
GPR78
''Homo sapiens chemokine (C-C motif) receptor 10''
''Homo sapiens regulator of G-protein signaling 1'' 2.0294021.8685661.649978
0.0318490.040134
0.039661
CCR10 TDRD1
P2RY8 ARRB1
LRP1 PARD3 RGS10 LRP6 PTGER4 CCL18 GPR162 CALCRL
P2RX7 GPR116
GPR78 ARRB2
CXCL5
0.0246221.6475091.5810661.5697761.4603621.3096241.2313031.2120542.9425951.9756971.6972671.6888441.6327431.4889021.2676111.242107
0.0084090.0394840.0250980.0249820.0042680.0340180.0243490.0213510.0146650.1929650.044784
0.0957240.4961560.5819940.9017840.8847660.0023050.2983860.0638270.5703480.2588080.4078730.5262030.7209120.2958360.6262670.2571830.6887660.925816
''Homo sapiens tudor domain containing 1''
''Homo sapiens purinergic receptor P2Y, G-protein coupled, 8''
''Homo sapiens arrestin, beta 1, transcript variant 1''
0.043787
''Homo sapiens low density lipoprotein receptor-related protein 1''
0.015613
''Homo sapiens par-3 partitioning defective 3 homolog (C. elegans),''
''Homo sapiens regulatior of G-protein signaling 10, transcript variant 1''
Down Down Down Down Down Down Down
Gene expression in paracancer compared with HCC tissues
Gene expression in HCC compared with normal liver tissues
Gene Gene
Fold
Regulation change Regulation
P P
2.945781
RGS1 TDRD1 CCL18 LRP1 PTGER4 ARRB1 P2RX7 GPR78 LRP6 RGS10 P2RY8 PARD3 CCR10 CALCRL GPR162 GPR116 ARRB2 CXCL5
Up Up Up Up Up Up Up Up Up Up Up Up
3.6073172.69462.2121662.0316431.6260521.4970231.4965761.2825881.2631761.2359121.2120611.0950671.5764931.5584251.2814471.2673331.0349091.015393
0.2453560.0511410.0158130.0493990.5598820.3451430.626850.3382890.4279320.6575720.6776930.8547410.4429730.1534260.6346260.6571710.9299660.925436
CCR10
P2RY8 CALCRL
RGS10 ARRB1
CCL18 P2RX7
LRP1 RGS1 TDRD1 GPR162 GPR116 PTGER4 GPR78 ARRB2 CXCL5 PARD3
LRP6
Up Up Up Up Up
Up Up Up Up Up Up Up Up Up Down
Down Down Down Down Down Down Down
1.3592621.2190741.0596421.056146.5095072.5274831.8170231.7775271.6331121.5417711.464197
1.3014411.224853
1.341567
1.1494661.025885
Down Down Down Down Down Down
Down Down Down Down Down Down
1.223277
0.002701
Figure 2 | GPCR-related proteins involved in inammation-mediated human HCC. (a) Two-dimensional hierarchical clustering results for GPCR relative genes among normal liver tissue, HCC and its paracancerous tissues. The fold changes in mRNA levels in paracancerous tissues and HCC relative to normal liver tissues are represented by green and red squares, showing decreased and increased levels, respectively. (b,c) GPCR relative gene expression in paracancerous tissue compared with normal liver and HCC tissues. The ratio represents the expression value in paracancerous tissue compared with the expression level in normal liver and HCC tissues. (d) GPCR relative gene expression in HCC tissue compared with normal liver tissue. Po0.05 by using
Students t-test.
(Fig. 1eg). Immunohistochemistry staining was performed to conrm ARRB1 expression in 7 normal liver tissues and 89 paired HCC with adjacent paracancerous tissues. A small amount of ARRB1 expression was observed in normal liver tissues. In contrast, prominent ARRB1 staining, predominantly in cytoplasm, was found in both HCC and paracancerous tissues (Fig. 1h). Clear ARRB1 expression was observed in both HCC and paracancerous tissues, and strong positive staining of ARRB1 in the paracancerous tissues was signicantly higher (78.7%) than in HCC tissues (60.7%), as shown in Supplementary Table 1. These results demonstrated that ARRB1 is involved in inammation-mediated hepatocellular carcinogenesis and plays a critical role in carcinogenesis.
Inammation induces hepatocellular ARRB1 expression in mice. Our data showed that ARRB1 was signicantly upregulated in HCC and adjacent paracancerous tissues in infected HBV patients. However, it remained unknown whether ARRB1 expression was directly induced by inammation in animals. We established two mouse hepatitis models by tetrachloromethane (CCl4, a well-known hepatotoxin) or diethylnitrosamine (DEN, a genotoxic drug that induces hepatocellular carcinogenesis).
After CCl4 or DEN treatment, the hepatic inammatory mediators, including IL-1a, IL-1b, IL-6, TNF-a, ICAM-1 and VCAM-1, were markedly upregulated (Fig. 3a,b). Simultaneously, western blotting showed that the protein levels of TNF-a and ARRB1 were markedly induced in hepatic tissues after CCl4 treatment (Fig. 3c,d) or DEN treatment (Fig. 3e,f). Furthermore, immunohistochemistry staining conrmed that the expression of TNF-a and ARRB1 was clearly increased in hepatocytes after CCl4 treatment or DEN treatment (Fig. 3g,h). The data indicated that the CCl4- or DEN-induced inammatory response signicantly enhances hepatocellular ARRB1 expression in mice.
ARRB1 deciency suppresses hepatocellular carcinogenesis. The preceding data have shown that the inammatory response induces hepatocellular ARRB1 expression and that ARRB1 may be involved in inammation-mediated hepatocellular carcinogenesis. To conrm whether ARRB1 plays a role in inammation-mediated hepatocellular carcinogenesis, we induced hepatocarcinogenesis with the inammatory genotoxic drug DEN in ARRB1-decient mice. Male mice were treated with a single injection of DEN at age 15 days, and they efciently developed HCC. Tumour incidence and tumour weight as well as
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Vehicle
*
Relative mRNA level
5
4
2
1
0
Relative mRNA level
4
3
2
1
0
Vehicle
CCI4 (2 m)
DEN (10 d)
*
*
*
*
3 * *
*
* *
*
*
IL-1[afii9825]
IL-1[afii9826]
TNF-[afii9825]
IL-6
ICAM-1
VCAM-1
IL-1[afii9825]
IL-1[afii9826]
TNF-[afii9825]
IL-6
ICAM-1
VCAM-1
Relative protein level Relative protein level
CCI4 (2m)
8 P<0.01
P<0.01
P<0.01
P<0.01
DEN (10 d)
6
TNF-
ARRB1
-Actin
TNF-
TNF- TNF-
17
46
46
4
Vehicle
CCI4 (2 m)
46
46
2
0 TNF-
ARRB1
ARRB1
Vehicle
DEN (10 d)
4
3
2
1
17
Vehicle
ARRB1
DEN (10 d)
-Actin
Vehicle
0 TNF-
Vehicle
CCI4 (2 m)
Vehicle
ARRB1
ARRB1
Figure 3 | Inammation induced hepatocellular ARRB1 expression in mice. (a) Expression of indicated inammatory mediators mRNA in the mice livers after either physiological saline (Vehicle) or CCl4 (15 mg kg 1) intraperitoneal injection twice a week for 2 months were analysed by real-time PCR.
Values are means.d. (n 6 in each group), *Po0.05 compared with vehicle treatment by using Students t-test. (b) mRNA expression of inammatory
mediators in the mouse livers after either physiological saline (Vehicle) or 100 mg kg 1 of DEN intraperitoneal injection for 10 days were analysed by real-time PCR. Values are means.d. (n 6 in each group), Students t-test used: *Po0.05 compared with vehicle treatment. (c,d) Protein expression of
TNF-a and ARRB1 in the livers of WT mice was determined by western blotting after either physiological saline (Vehicle) or 15 mg kg 1 of CCl4 intraperitoneal injection twice a week for 2 months. Values are means.d. (n 6 in each group). Po0.01 by using Students t-test. (e,f) Protein expression
of TNF-a and ARRB1 in the livers of WTmice was determined by western blotting 10 days after either physiological saline (Vehicle) or 100 mg kg 1 of DEN intraperitoneal injection. Values are means.d. (n 6 in each group). Po0.05 using Students t-test. (g,h) Representative images of TNF-a (top) and IL-6
(bottom) staining in CCL4-induced liver cirrhosis and DEN-induced liver inammation. Scale bar, 50 mm.
tumour size were evaluated 9 months after DEN treatment. Tumours developed in all mice after 9 months; however, the hepatocarcinogenesis was signicantly reduced in ARRB1-knockout (KO) mice compared with ARRB1 wild type (WT) (Fig. 4a,b). The relative liver weight versus body weight in ARRB1-KO mice was reduced by 2.5-fold compared with WT mice (1.71.2 versus 4.61.1%), as shown in Fig. 4c. The tumour incidence in ARRB1-KO mice was decreased approximately threefold compared with WT mice (3.21.7 versus9.62.4) (Fig. 4d). The maximal tumour size and average tumour size also were markedly decreased in ARRB1-KO mice compared with those in WT mice (Fig. 4e,f). Tumour samples were conrmed by histopathological analysis to be hepatocellular cancer (Fig. 4g). Next, we analysed tumour cell proliferation by Ki67 immunohistochemistry staining. The results showed that the malignant cell proliferation was signicantly repressed and that the numbers of Ki67-positive cells were reduced by B48% in
ARRB1-KO mice compared with ARRB1 WT mice (Fig. 4h,i).
Simultaneously, the effect of ARRB2 deciency in DEN-induced hepatocellular carcinogenesis was also investigated, and the results showed that ARRB2 deciency did not affect hepato-cellular cancer initiation and development (Supplementary Fig. 1). Furthermore, a tumorigenicity experiment in Balb/c nude mice showed that ARRB1, but not ARRB2, signicantly promoted xenograft tumour growth in vivo (Fig. 5). These results suggest that deciency of ARRB1, but not ARRB2, suppresses DEN-induced hepatocellular carcinogenesis by downregulating hepatocellular proliferation.
Deleted ARRB1 inhibits hepatic compensatory proliferation. The preceding data demonstrated that ARRB1 is a potent mediator of HCC progression, and previous studies suggested that compensatory proliferation after extensive hepatocyte apoptosis induced by DEN is essential for DEN-induced HCC development27. To investigate the mechanism of ARRB1 in
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ARRB1 ARRB1
WT WT
Vehicle
KO KO
Vehicle
DEN (9 m)
DEN (9 m)
P<0.01 P<0.01 P<0.05 P<0.01
P<0.01
Tumour weight (%)
6
4
2
Tumour weight (%)
15
10
5
0
Max. tumour size
(mm)
15
10
5
0
Average tumour size
(mm)
12
8
4
0
ARRB1
0 WT
KO
WT KO
ARRB1 WT KO
ARRB1 WT KO
ARRB1
ARRB1 ARRB1
WT WT KO
KO
WT
KO
Vehicle
ARRB1 WT ARRB1 KO
Ki67 index (%)
40
30
20
10
Vehicle
DEN (9m)
DEN (9m)
0 Vehicle
DEN (9m)
H&E
Ki-67 IHC
Figure 4 | ARRB1 deciency suppressed DEN-induced hepatocellular carcinogenesis. WT and ARRB1-KO mice were treated with a single DEN(15 mg kg 1) intraperitoneal injection, and livers were harvested at 9 months. (a) MRI images of DEN-induced liver tumours after gadobenate dimeglumine injection (0.1 mmol kg 1). (b) Photographs of DEN-induced liver tumours at 9 months. (c) Quantication of liver average weight as a percentage of body weight (n 10 in each group). (d) Average numbers of liver tumours in WT and ARRB1-KO mice at 9 months (n 10 in each group). (e) Maximal tumour
size measured by caliper (n 10 in each group). (f) Average liver tumour diameter by caliper (n 10 in each group). (g) Representative H&E staining of
DEN-induced liver tumours in WTand ARRB1 KO mice. Scale bar, 100 mm. (h,i) Ki67 staining in DEN-induced liver tumours at 9 months after DEN injection (Scale bar, 50 mm) and the Ki67 index was scored (n 6 in each group). All values are means.d. Po0.01 or Po0.05 by using Students t-test.
hepatocellular carcinogenesis, we next analysed whether ARRB1 enhanced compensatory hepatocyte proliferation to contribute to hepatocellular carcinogenesis by inhibiting apoptosis in DEN-treated mice. Induction of hepatic MPO activity, which is an indicator of neutrophil inltration, showed no signicant difference between ARRB1 WT mice and ARRB1-KO mice 10 days after DEN treatment (Fig. 6a). Histopathological analysis showed signicant hepatocyte death with inammatory cell inltration in DEN-treated mice (Fig. 6b). Surprisingly, DEN-induced apoptosis was markedly increased in ARRB1-KO mice, and the increase was B50% greater than in ARRB1 WT mice (Fig. 6c,d). Furthermore, hepatic active caspase-3 was assessed by western blotting and immunohistochemistry staining, which showed that DEN distinctly induced caspase-3 activation and that active caspase-3 was visibly upregulated in ARRB1-KO mice compared with ARRB1 WT mice (Fig. 6eg). Moreover, hepatocellular compensatory proliferation was also signicantly upregulated in DEN-treated mice; however, the compensatory proliferation was clearly repressed in ARRB1 KO compared with ARRB1 WT mice (Fig. 6hj). These results demonstrated that ARRB1 inhibits inammation-induced hepatocellular apoptosis and enhances hepatocellular compensatory proliferation in DEN-treated mice.
Proinammatory factor TNF-a facilitates ARRB1 expression. The proinammatory factor TNF-a plays a pivotal role in inammatory responses, and it is one of the most important inammatory factors closely related with GPCRs. It is unclear whether TNF-a facilitates hepatic ARRB1 expression. First, we treated the HCC cell line HepG2 and an immortal human liver cell line LO2 with TNF-a, and we observed that TNF-a signicantly induced ARRB1 expression (Fig. 7a,b). Then, we treated ARRB1 WT mice by TNF-a intraperitoneal injection, and we also found that TNF-a remarkably induced hepatic ARRB1 expression; ARRB1 mRNA was increased B2.6-fold at 2 h after TNF-a treatment compared with vehicle-treated mice, and ARRB1 protein was also signicantly upregulated at 6 h after TNF-a treatment compared with vehicle-treated mice (Fig. 7c,d).
Our data showed that TNF-a upregulated ARRB1 expression in human HepG2 and LO2 cell lines in a dose-dependent and time-dependent manner and that TNF-a also induced hepatic ARRB1 expression in mice. The data indicated that the proinammatory mediator TNF-a facilitates ARRB1 expression in vitro and in vivo.
ARRB1 promotes hepatocellular proliferation via Akt pathway. The PI3K/Akt signalling pathway is related to HCC cell
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Tumour volume (mm2)
150 * P <0.01 *
*
Vector
ARRB1
Tumour volume (mm2)
10
0
70 60
P >0.05
Vector
ARRB2
100
50
40 30
50
20
0 0 3 6 9 12 15 18 21 24 (d) 0 3 6 9 12 15 18 21 24 (d)
Vector
ARRB1
Vector
ARRB2
250 P <0.05
250
Tumor weight (mg)
Tumor weight (mg)
200
200
P >0.05
150
150
100
100
50
50
0
0
Vector ARRB1 Vector
Vector
ARRB2
ARRB1
H&E HA PCNA
Figure 5 | ARRB1 upregulated the growth of xenograft HCC. (a) The growth curve of xenograft tumour of Hep3B cells subjected to ARRB1-HA or vector-HA transfection. Data were expressed as means.d. (n 5 in each group), *Po0.05 by using Students t-test. (b) The growth curve of xenograft
tumours of Hep3B cells subjected to ARRB2-HA transfection or vector-HA transfection. Data were expressed as means.d. (n 5 in each group).
(c) Xenograft tumours from Hep3B cells subjected to ARRB1-HA transfection (bottom) or vector-HA transfection (top) at the end of the experiment. (d) Xenograft tumours from Hep3B cells subjected to ARRB2-HA transfection (bottom) or vector-HA transfection (top) at the end of the experiment. (e) Xenograft tumour weights from different treatment groups at the end of the experiment. Data were expressed as means.d. (n 5 in each group).
(f) Representative H&E, HA and PCNA staining from xenograft tumours in Hep3B cells subjected to ARRB1-HA or vector-HA transfection. Scale bar, 100 mm. Po0.05 using Students t-test.
proliferation16. Previous reports have shown that ARRB1 mediates Akt phosphorylation to activate PI3K/Akt signalling in response to a variety of stimuli28. ARRB1 mRNA expression levels in HepG2, Hep3B, Huh7 and LO2 cell lines were analysed by real-time PCR. The data showed that among these four cell lines, HepG2 and LO2 had mild ARRB1 mRNA expression, Huh7 had strong expression, and Hep3B had low ARRB1 mRNA expression (Supplementary Fig. 2). Therefore, we transfected ARRB1 plasmid into HepG2 and LO2 cell lines, and we found that cell viability was signicantly increased, Akt was markedly phosphorylated, and PCNA expression was markedly induced (Fig. 8ac). Then, we downregulated ARRB1 by siRNA in HepG2 and LO2 cell lines and observed that cell viability was signicantly reduced, Akt phosphorylation was markedly restrained and PCNA expression was clearly inhibited (Fig. 8df). Furthermore, we inhibited Akt activity by the Akt inhibitor A6730 in HepG2 and LO2 cell lines and found that cell viability was signicantly reduced, Akt phosphorylation was fully restrained, and PCNA expression was markedly inhibited (Supplementary Fig. 3ac). Simultaneously, we induced ARRB1 expression by TNF-a in HepG2 and LO2 cell lines and found that
Akt inhibitor A6730-treatment signicantly reduced cell viability, fully reduced Akt phosphorylation, and markedly inhibited PCNA expression (Supplementary Fig. 3df). Next, we treated HepG2 and LO2 cell lines with A6730 after ARRB1 plasmid transfection and also found that cell viability was signicantly downregulated, Akt phosphorylation was fully restrained and PCNA expression was markedly reduced (Fig. 8gi). Sequentially, we overexpressed ARRB1 to examine the effect of ARRB1 on cell proliferation by ARRB1 plasmid transfection in HepG2 and
Hep3B as well as LO2 cell lines, and we observed that ARRB1 signicantly promoted hepatocellular growth and colony formation among three cell lines (Fig. 9). Furthermore, downregulation of ARRB1 expression in HepG2, Huh7 and LO2 by siRNA inhibited hepatocellular proliferation in vitro (Supplementary Fig. 4). Altogether, these results suggest that ARRB1 promotes hepatocellular proliferation through PI3K/Akt signalling.
Inammation-induced HCC depends on ARRB1/Akt activation. Although the preceding results have demonstrated that ARRB1 mediates Akt phosphorylation in vitro, it was unclear whether ARRB1 mediates Akt phosphorylation in DEN-induced hepato-cellular carcinogenesis. We examined hepatic Akt phosphorylation in DEN-treated mice to investigate the effect of ARRB1 on Akt phosphorylation in response to hepatocyte survival and proliferation using ARRB1-KO and ARRB1 WT mice. Although ARRB1 deciency did not affect TNF-a expression, it signicantly attenuated DEN-induced Akt activation and PCNA expression (Fig. 10a, Supplementary Fig. 5a). In DEN-induced hepatocellular carcinogenesis, PI3K and Akt expression were markedly increased, Akt phosphorylation was remarkably upregulated and PCNA expression was clearly enhanced in HCC tissues compared with paracancerous tissues (Fig. 10b). Although ARRB1 deciency did not depress PI3K and Akt expression, it clearly repressed Akt phosphorylation and PCNA expression, and immunouorescence staining showed that Akt activation was distinctly inhibited in both HCC tissues and paracancerous tissues (Fig. 10b, Supplementary Fig. 5bd). Furthermore, ARRB1 expression also
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Figure 6 | Effects of ARRB1 deletion on inammation-induced hepatocellular apoptosis and hepatocellular proliferation. (a) MPO activity was determined in DEN-treated WT and ARRB1-KO mice. Values are means.d. (n 6 in each group), Students t-test used: *Po0.05 compared with
vehicle treatment. (b) Representative H&E staining images of liver tissues at 10 days after DEN injection in WT and ARRB1-KO mice. Scale bar, 50 mm. (c,d) Liver tissues were harvested from WT and ARRB1-KO mice at 0 and 10 days after injection of DEN (100 mg kg 1). TUNEL (brown) was stained in the liver (Scale bar, 100 mm), and the apoptotic index was measured by counting TUNEL signals. TUNEL index was measured. Values are means.d. (n 6 in
each group), *Po0.05 compared with vehicle treatment, #Po0.05 compared with WT mice by using Students t-test. (e) Cleaved caspase-3 protein expression was determined by western blotting. (f,g) Cleaved caspase-3 (brown) was stained in liver tissues (Scale bar, 100 mm), and the cleaved caspase-3 index was detected. Values are means.d. (n 6 in each group), *Po0.05 compared with vehicle treatment, #Po0.05 compared with WT mice using
Students t-test. (h) PCNA level in the livers was determined by western blotting. (i,j) Ki-67 expression (brown) was checked by immunohistochemical staining (Scale bar, 100 mm), and the Ki67 index was measured by counting Ki-67 signals. Values are means.d. (n 6 in each group), Students t-test
used: *Po0.05 compared with vehicle treatment, #Po0.05 compared with ARRB1-KO mice.
correlated with Akt activity in human HCC tissue samples (Supplementary Fig. 6ac). In addition, we tested the effect of TNF-a on Akt phosphorylation using ARRB1 WT mice and found that ARRB1 expression and Akt phosphorylation were signicantly upregulated 6 h after intraperitoneal TNF-a injection (Fig. 10c). However, pretreatment with Akt inhibitor A6730 in mice markedly depressed hepatic Akt phosphorylation, but not
ARRB1 expression (Fig. 10d). The preceding data showed that ARRB1 enhanced Akt phosphorylation. However, whether the effect of ARRB1 is mediated by interacting with Akt was unclear. To conrm this mechanism, the interaction between ARRB1 and Akt in mammalian cells was analysed by co-immunoprecipitation. The interaction between ARRB1 and Akt was examined in HepG2 cells by co-immunoprecipitation after ARRB1
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Figure 7 | Proinammatory mediator TNF- a enhanced ARRB1 expression. (a,b) HepG2 and LO2 cells were treated with TNF-a, and expression of ARRB1 was analysed by western blotting. Shown is a representative result of three experiments. (c,d) WT mice were treated by TNF-a (40 mg kg 1)
intraperitoneal injection for 4 h, and hepatic expression of ARRB1 mRNA and ARRB1 protein were analysed by real-time PCR and western blotting, respectively. Values are means.d. (n 6 in each group). Po0.01 by using Students t-test.
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Figure 8 | ARRB1 promoted hepatocellular proliferation through PI3K/Akt signalling. (ac) ARRB1 transfection signicantly increased cell growth, enhanced Akt phosphorylation and PCNA overexpression. The experiment was repeated three times. (df) ARRB1 expression was silenced by ARRB1-siRNA. ARRB1 knockdown signicantly restrained cell growth, reduced Akt phosphorylation and PCNA product in HepG2 and LO2 cell lines. (gi) Cells were treated by Akt inhibitor after ARRB1 transfection. Akt inhibitor clearly inhibited ARRB1-induced cell growth and Akt phosphorylation, and repressed PCNA expression. All values are the meanss.d. in three separate experiments and repeated three times. Po0.01 or Po0.05 using Students t-test.
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Figure 9 | ARRB1 promoted hepatocellular proliferation in vitro. Cells were stably transfected with pcDNA3.0/ARRB1-GFP or pcDNA3.0/GFP (Vector) to overexpress ARRB1 in HepG2 and Hep3B as well as LO2 cell lines. (a) Cells stably expressed ARBB1 after pcDNA3.0/ARRB1-GFP transfectionfor 48 h. Scale bar, 50 mm. (b) Colonies were formed in pcDNA3.0/ARRB1-GFP transfected cells after G418 selection. (ce) Cell growth curve after pcDNA3.0/ARRB1-GFP transfection. (fh) Quantitation of colony formation in pcDNA3.0/ARRB1-GFP transfected cells after G418 selection. All values are the meanss.d. in three separate experiments and repeated three times. Po0.01 or Po0.05 using Students t-test.
transfection, and the results showed that ARRB1 interacted with Akt by binding (Fig. 10e). Furthermore, TNF-a notably enhanced
ARRB1 expression and promoted ARRB1 interaction with Akt by binding to boost Akt phosphorylation (Fig. 10f). These results indicated that inammation-induced hepatocellular malignant proliferation depends on ARRB1-mediated Akt activation, resulting in hepatocellular carcinogenesis.
DiscussionElucidating the mechanisms related to inammation-induced HCC has long been considered a key for unravelling critical pathways in hepatocarcinogenesis. Our data showed that the inammation induced inammatory mediators including TNF-a, that TNF-a enhanced ARRB1 expression, and that ARRB1 activated PI3K/Akt signalling through Akt phosphorylation, resulting in inhibition of hepatocellular apoptosis and upregulation of hepatocellular compensatory proliferation to drive hepatocyte carcinogenesis. The results demonstrated that inammation-induced hepatocellular carcinogenesis works through the TNF-a/ARRB1/Akt axis and that ARRB1 is an essential tumour promoter in the liver.
Many studies have analysed the critical role of inammation in HCC2. TNF-a is one of the most important proinammatory factors with numerous biological properties, such as apoptosis, proliferation and differentiation, and it contributes to carcinogenesis in various inammatory conditions such as chronic viral hepatitis as well as alcoholic and non-alcoholic fatty liver diseases2931. Administration of DEN or CCl4 to mice induces liver injury following hepatitis6,27. Experimentally, in DEN- or CCl4-induced mouse hepatitis models, inammation enhances TNF-a to promote liver tumorigenesis32. Targets of
TNF-a downstream that execute the oncogenic functions have not been fully elucidated. GPCRs have been implicated in TNF-a-induced inammatory responses. A gene expression assay was performed to screen for alterative GPCR relative genes among normal liver tissues, HCC tissues and its paracancerous tissues with hepatitis. The data showed that several GPCR relative genes, including ARRB1, CCR10, P2RY8 and RGS10, were upregulated in HCC tissues and paracancerous tissues compared with normal liver tissues (Fig. 2). P2RY8, CCR10 and RGS10, which were elevated in HCC tissues and their pair paracancerous tissues, have been reported to play roles in carcinoma3335. Our data showed that ARRB1 was upregulated in human HCC tissues and its paracancerous tissues compared with normal liver tissues, but there was no signicant difference between HCC tissues and paracancerous tissues, suggesting that ARRB1 may play an important role in hepatocellular carcinogenesis. ARRB1 contributes to cell proliferation, apoptosis and differentiation via signal pathways and is involved in leukaemia, colon, gastric and breast cancers25,26,36. Upregulation of ARRB1 in hepatitis-mediated HCC tissues and its paracancerous tissues indicated that ARRB1 is involved in inammation-induced hepatocellular carcinogenesis. ARRB1 expression at the both mRNA and protein levels were markedly increased in human HCC tissues and paired paracancerous tissues. Inammatory cell inltration and inammatory cytokine upregulation, especially TNF-a, were also observed (Fig. 1). Treatment with DEN or CCl4 signicantly induced hepatic ARRB1 expression in mice; however, ARRB1 deciency did not depress the inammatory response (Figs 3 and 6a). The results indicated that ARRB1 is induced by inammation, at least partly in connection with TNF-a, and that ARRB1 is a downstream target in inammatory response.
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Figure 10 | Inammation-induced hepatocellular carcinogenesis depended on ARRB1-mediated Akt activation. (a) DEN-induced inammation upregulated expression of TNF-a, ARRB1, p-Akt and PCNA in mice liver, and ARRB1 knockout signicantly inhibited the expression. (b) PI3K and Akt were markedly upregulated in DEN-induced hepatocellular carcinogenesis; however, ARRB1 knockout clearly restrained Akt phosphorylation and reduced
PCNA production in hepatocellular carcinogenesis. (c,d) The expression of ARRB1, PI3K, p-Akt and PCNA was analysed by western blotting in mouse livers 6 h after intraperitoneal TNF-a injection. TNF-a induced ARRB1 increase and Akt phosphorylation; however, Akt inhibitor A6730 (50 mg kg 1)
pretreatment signicantly repressed the Akt phosphorylation, but did not affect ARRB1 expression. (e) HepG2 cells were transfected with GFP-ARRB1 as indicated. The cellular lysates were subjected to immunoprecipitation with an anti-GFP antibody. Co-immunoprecipitated endogenous Akt was detected with an anti-Akt antibody. (f) The HepG2 cells were challenged with TNF-a (40 ng ml 1) for 4 h, and then the cells were subjected to immunoprecipitation with an anti-ARRB1 antibody. Co-immunoprecipitated endogenous Akt was detected with an anti-Akt antibody. Shown is a representative result of three experiments. IP immunoprecipitate; IB immunoblot.
ARRB1 was signicantly upregulated in hepatitis-mediated human HCC samples and DEN-induced mice HCC models, indicating that ARRB1 plays a critical role in inammation-induced hepatocellular carcinogenesis. To conrm the effect of ARRB1 in inammation-induced hepatocellular carcinogenesis, we induced hepatocarcinogenesis using DEN in ARRB1 /
mice. The results showed that tumour number decreased by 67% and tumour load decreased by 63% in ARRB1 / mice compared with ARRB1 / mice 9 months after DEN treatment (Fig. 4). Conversely, the hepatocarcinogenesis did not show any difference in ARRB2 / mice compared with ARRB2 / mice 9 months after DEN treatment (Supplementary Fig. 1). Furthermore, a tumorigenicity experiment in nude mice showed that ARRB1, but not ARRB2, played a pivotal role in promoting xenograft tumour growth in vivo (Fig. 5). These data suggest that ARRB1, but not ARRB2, plays an essential role in inammation-induced hepatocellular carcinogenesis. It was reported that ARRB2, but not ARRB1, is essential for the initiation and growth
of intestinal tumours37. Thus far, ARRB1 and ARRB2 have been found to have different effects in initiation and development of malignant tumours23. For example, one study showed that ARRB1, but not ARRB2, was required for changes in cell morphology and ablation of tight junctions consistent with epithelial-mesenchymal transition in non-small cell lung cancer38. Our study also showed that ARRB1, but not ARRB2, played a crucial role in hepatocarcinogenesis. This discrepancy between ARRB1 and ARRB2 may be due to different functions between ARRB1 and ARRB2 in cellular physiology and pathophysiology. Certain studies suggest that apoptosis drives a compensatory proliferation to facilitate hepatocellular carcinogenesis in DEN-induced mice27. However, our study showed that lack of ARRB1 increased DEN-induced hepato-cellular apoptosis, depressed hepatocellular proliferation and resulted in downregulation of hepatocellular carcinogenesis (Fig. 6). The results indicate that ARRB1 is essential for HCC initiation and development by inhibiting apoptosis and
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promoting compensatory proliferation. The putative oncogenic function of ARRB1 in HCC was further conrmed in vitro. Overexpression of ARRB1 in hepatic cell lines (HepG2, Hep3B and LO2) signicantly promoted cellular viability and colony formation (Fig. 9). Downregulation of ARRB1 signicantly inhibited cellular growth and proliferation in HepG2, Huh7 and LO2 lines (Supplementary Fig. 4). These data conrmed that ARRB1 enhances inammation-induced hepatocellular carcinogenesis by promoting hepatocellular malignant proliferation. TNF-a not only serves as a key mediator of hepatocyte apoptosis resulting in the liver damage, but also plays an important role in cellular proliferation leading to liver regeneration and even hepatocarcinogenesis in liver39. In this study, our results showed that TNF-a treatment signicantly induced ARRB1 expression in both human HCC cell lines and mice hepatic tissues (Fig. 7) and suggested that TNF-a may be an essential promotor of ARRB1 expression.
Other studies have shown that ARRB1 is involved in several types of cancer by serving as a scaffold protein in various signal pathways, including ERK1/2, Wnt/b-catenin and c-Src25.
Previous studies have established that ARRB1 is involved in cell proliferation, apoptosis and differentiation by mediating Akt phosphorylation response to a wide range of stimuli in different cell types28,40. Akt is essential for HCC development in both mice and humans, and HCC samples have revealed that activation of Akt is associated with poor prognosis41. We investigated the molecular mechanism of ARRB1 involved in hepatocellular carcinogenesis. The data showed that ARRB1 overexpression clearly promoted Akt phosphorylation (active form) and PCNA upregulation in vitro, whereas ARRB1 knockdown clearly depressed Akt phosphorylation and PCNA expression. Furthermore, the Akt inhibitor A6730 signicantly repressed ARRB1-induced PCNA upregulation (Fig. 8). In addition, our results showed that ARRB1-KO mice had clearly depressed hepatic Akt phosphorylation and downregulated PCNA expression 10 days after DEN treatment (Fig. 10), and ARRB1-KO mice also had markedly depressed Akt activity and PCNA expression in both HCC tissues and its paracancerous tissues 9 months after DEN treatment (Supplementary Fig. 5). In human HCC samples, upregulation of ARRB1 expression was linked with Akt phosphorylation (Supplementary Fig. 6). Akt has been established as an important modulator of hepatocellular carcinoma. In this study, we demonstrated that ARRB1 interacts with Akt, thus providing a solid basis for ARRB1/Akt signalling. Our study further revealed that the ARRB1 interaction with Akt was signicantly promoted by inammatory stimulation with TNF-a (Fig. 10e,f). Accordingly, the current study strongly suggests a potential role for TNF-a in the modulation of Akt-mediated hepatocellular carcinogenesis and clearly indicates that ARRB1 may serve as a signalling linker between the TNF-a and Akt pathways. Consequently, inammation induces hepatocellular carcinogenesis via TNF-a-mediated ARRB1 interaction with Akt to drive hepatocellular malignant proliferation.
Methods
Tissue samples and cell lines. Seven normal liver tissue samples were from parahemangioma sites of hepatic hemangioma patients without hepatitis, and the paired tissue samples from HCC and paracancerous tissues were obtained from 89 hepatitis B virus-infected HCC patients during operations before any therapeutic intervention. All of the samples were subsequently veried by histology. The study protocol was approved by the Clinical Research Ethics Committee of The Third Afliated Hospital of Sun Yat-Sen University. Written informed consent was received from each patient and healthy volunteers before inclusion in the study. HepG2 and Hep3B cell lines were obtained from the American Type Culture Collection (ATCC, Manassas, VA, USA). The cell lines were used in the study after negative testing for contamination with mycoplasma. The cells were cultured in Dulbeccos modied Eagles medium (DMEM) for HepG2, Hep3B and Huh7 cell
lines or RPMI 1640 medium for LO2 cell line (Gibco BRL, Rockville, MD, USA) with 10% fetal bovine serum. Cell lines (HepG2 and LO2) were treated with10 mmol l 1 of the Akt kinase inhibitor A6730 for 2 h (Sigma, St Louis, MO, USA).
Mice. The procedures for all animal experiments were approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee at The Third Afliated Hospital of Sun Yat-Sen University. ARRB1 / and ARRB1 / , ARRB2 / and ARRB2 /
littermates on C57BL/6 background were generated from heterozygote intercrosses (Kindly provided by Dr R. J. Lefkowitz, Duke University Medical Centre, Durham, NC, USA). Genotyping was performed as previously described42. The mice were housed in micro-isolator cages in a room illuminated from 0700 hours to 1900 hours (12:12-hour light/dark cycle) and were allowed access to water and chow ad libitum.
Microarray experiment. The Agilent SurePrint G3 Human Gene Expression8 60 K Array was designed with eight identical arrays per slide, with each array
containing probes interrogating about 27,958 Entrez Gene RNAs. The array also contains 1,280 Agilent control probes. The normal liver samples were obtained from normal hepatic tissue in three hepatic hemangioma surgical operative patients, and three matched pairs of HCC and its paracancerous tissues were, respectively, obtained from three HCC surgical operative patients without any chemotherapy and radiotherapy. The samples were subsequently veried by histology assay. Then, total RNA from each tissue sample was isolated according to the manufacturers instructions of TRIzol reagent (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA, USA) and was further puried with mirVana miRNA Isolation Kit (Ambion, Austin, TX, USA) according to the manufacturers protocol. The purity and concentration of RNA were determined from OD260/280 readings using spectrophotometer (NanoDrop ND-1,000). cDNA labelled with a uorescent dye (Cy3-dCTP) was produced by Eberwines linear RNA amplication method and subsequent enzymatic reaction. This procedure has been improved using CapitalBio cRNA Amplication and Labelling Kit (CapitalBio, Beijing, China) for producing higher yields of labelled cDNA. After completion of double-stranded cDNA (dsDNA) synthesis using DNA polymerase and RNase H, the dsDNA products were puried using a PCR NucleoSpin Extract II Kit (MN) and eluted with 30 ml elution buffer.
The eluted double-stranded cDNA products were vacuums evaporated to 16 ml and subjected to 40 ml in vitro transcription reactions at 37 C for 14 h using a T7 Enzyme Mix. Klenow enzyme labelling strategy was adopted after reverse transcription using CbcScript II reverse transcriptase. Array hybridization was performed in a Agilent Hybridization oven overnight at a rotation speed of 20 r.p.m. at 42 C and washed with two consecutive solutions (0.2% SDS, 2 SSC
at 42 C for 5 min, and 0.2 SSC for 5 min at room temperature). Details of the
probe set can be obtained at http://www.chem.agilent.com/library/brochures/5989-3805EN.pdf
Web End =http://www.chem.agilent.com/library/brochures/5989- http://www.chem.agilent.com/library/brochures/5989-3805EN.pdf
Web End =3805EN.pdf . The array data were analysed for data summarization, normalization and quality control using the GeneSpring software V12 (Agilent). To select the differentially expressed genes, we used threshold values of Z1.5 and r 1.5-fold
change and a Benjamini-Hochberg-corrected P value of 0.05. The data were Log2 transformed and median centred by genes using the Adjust Data function of CLUSTER 3.0 software and then further analysed with hierarchical clustering with average linkage. Finally, tree visualization was performed using Java Treeview (Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA, USA). Accession number is available from the NCBI under GEO accession number (GSE67764).
Treatment of mice. Male mice were used in all study. For the diethylnitrosamine (DEN)-induced HCC model, DEN (15 mg kg 1) was intraperitoneally injected once into 15-day-old mice. Mice were killed after 9 months on standard diet.
Surface tumour nodules in each liver lobe were counted and measured with a caliper. For study of tetrachloromethane (CCl4)-induced cirrhosis, 8-week-old mice were intraperitoneally injected with 20% CCl4 (Sinopharm Chemical Reagent, China) dissolved in olive oil solution (Sinopharm Chemical Reagent, China) at 5 ml kg 1 body weight, twice per week for 8 weeks. The vehicle group was intraperitoneally injected with equivalent volume olive oil, twice per week for 8 weeks. For short-term studies of DEN-induced liver inammation, 8- to 12-week-old mice were intraperitoneally injected with DEN dissolved in physiological saline at 100 mg kg 1 body weight and killed after 10 days. Mice receiving treatment with
TNF-a (40 mg kg 1) were intraperitoneally injected twice 6 h before being killed. Mice receiving the Akt inhibitor (A6730, 50 mg kg 1) were intraperitoneally injected once 6 h before being killed. The vehicle treatment was intraperitoneal injection with equivalent volume physiological saline.
MRI scan in DEN-induced HCC mice model. The mice were anaesthetized for 1 h by intraperitoneal injection of 4% chloral hydrate (200 mg kg 1), and scanned by 3T MRI (TOSHIBA, Tokyo, Japan) using a T(2)-weighted sequence following intraperitoneal injection of contrast medium, gadobenate dimeglumine (Bracco Imaging, Milan, Italy) at a 0.1 mmol kg 1 dose.
Total RNA extraction and real-time PCR. Total RNA was isolated from the liver tissue samples using the RNAgents Total RNA Isolation System (Promega, Madison, WI, USA) according to the manufacturers instructions. First-strand
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NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | DOI: 10.1038/ncomms8369 ARTICLE
Small interfering RNA. Small interfering RNA (siRNA) was performed according to the manufacturers instructions. Cells were cultured in six-well plates. For ARRB1 siRNA treatment, cells were transfected with 20 mM ARRB1 RNA oligo kit (Gene Pharma, China). The ARRB1 siRNA sequence targeted the coding region of the ARRB1 mRNA (Supplementary Table 3). All of the experiments were performed in triplicate wells and repeated three times.
MPO activity assay. Mice liver specimens were homogenized in 0.5% hexadecyltrimethylammonium bromide dissolved in 50 mM phosphate buffer (pH 6.0) and sonicated for 10 s. Suspensions were freeze-thawed three times, and then centrifuged at 15,000 r.p.m. for 15 min. Supernatant of 100 ml was mixed with a solution of 0.167 mg ml 1 O-dianisidine hydrochloride and 0.0005% hydrogen peroxide. MPO activity was measured spectrophotometrically as the change in absorbance at 460 nm.
Xenograft tumours. Xenograft tumours were established by subcutaneous injection of 5 106 Hep3B cells into both anks of 6-week-old male Balb/c
athymic nude mice (n 5, in each). Hep3B cells were stably overexpressed with
pcDNA3.0-ARRB1-HA or pcDNA3.0-ARRB2-HA and pcDNA3.0-HA vector.
The athymic nude mice were purchased from animal centre of Sun Yat-Sen University (Guangzhou, China). Tumour growth was monitored by calipers every 3 days after inoculation. The tumour volume was calculated according to the formula (0.5 length width2).
Statistical analysis. Statistical analysis was performed using GraphPad Prism V software. Data are presented as meanss.d.. Statistical signicance was calculated with the independent Students t test for protein expression, comparing cellular proliferation, colony formation, gene expression and tumorigenicity between two selected groups. w2-test is used to analyse the positive rate differences among human normal liver tissues and human HCC specimens as well as its paracancerous samples. The transcript levels of ARRB1 in human normal liver, paracancerous and HCC tissues were compared using one-way ANOVA test. Differences were considered to be signicant if the probability of the difference occurring by chance was o5 in 100 (Po0.05).
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cDNA was synthesized using Superscript Reverse Transcriptase (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA, USA) according to the manufacturers instructions. Real-time PCR was performed on a Chromo 4 Detector System (MJ Research, Sierra Point, CA, USA) using gene-specic primers and DyNAmo SYBR Green Master Mix (Finnzymes, Espoo, Finland). Real-time RT-PCR was performed using SYBR Green master mixture (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA, USA) on HT7500 system (Applied Biosystems). Primer sequences are listed in (Supplementary Table 2). As the internal control, the expression of b-actin in each sample was also quantied.
PCR products were analysed.
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MO, USA). The signal was detected using ECL western blotting detection reagents (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech, Piscataway, NJ, USA). After quantifying the signals by densitometry, the results are expressed as a ratio to loading control densitometry units. Unedited images of IBs are shown in Supplementary Figs 711.
Immunoprecipitation. The cells were lysed in lysis buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl, pH7.5, 1 mM EDTA, 150 mM NaCl, 20 mM NaF, 0.5% Nonidet P-40, 10% glycerol, 1 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl uoride) for 1.5 h at 4 C at 48 h after transfection. The cell extracts were cleared, and the supernatant was incubated at 4 C with anti-GFP (1 mg, Roche Molecular Biochemicals 11814460001) or anti-ARRB1(1 mg, Santa Cruz Biotechnology sc-9182) antibody overnight. Immune complexes were immobilized on protein A (Amersham Biosciences) or anti-chicken IgY Sepharose beads (Promega) for 3 h, washed three times with lysis buffer and heated in SDS sample buffer in a 50 C water bath for 20 min. Western blot analysis was performed as described above. GFP-tagged proteins were detected with an anti-GFP antibody. Endogenous Akt was detected with an antibody specic to Akt (Cell Signaling Technology).
Immunohistological staining. Sections were deparafnized, rehydrated and treated with 3% hydrogen peroxide. Antigen retrieval was performed by boiling the sections for 2 min in Tris/EDTA Antigen Retrieval Solution (pH 9.0). Nonspecic antibody binding was blocked using 15% goat serum for 30 min. For staining in tissue samples, the slides were incubated with primary antibodies against ARRB1 (1:100, Epitomics 1274-1), MPO (1:200, Santa Cruz sc-59600), CD68 (1:200, Santa Cruz sc-20060), IL-6 (1:200, Santa Cruz sc-130326), PCNA (1:400, Santa Cruz sc-56), TNF-a (1:200, Santa Cruz sc-52746), cleaved caspase-3 (1:100, Cell
Signaling 9,661), HA (1:400, Cell Signaling 2,367), phospho-Akt (1:200, Cell Signaling 4,060) and Ki-67 antibody (1:400, Abcam ab66155). For IHC staining, the targeted protein was detected using secondary antibodies followed by detection using the ABC staining system (Santa Cruz), and the sections were counterstained with haematoxylin. For IF staining, targeted proteins were detected by related secondary antibody. Antibodyantigen complexes were visualized by incubation with biotin-conjugated secondary antibody and streptavidin Alexa 488 (Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR, USA), with the nuclei counterstained with 2 mg ml 1 of 4, 6-diamidino-2-phenylindole dihydrochloride (DAPI) (Molecular Probes).
Terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUTP-digoxigenin nick end labelling (TUNEL) assay was performed using an in situ cell death detection kit (Roche, Basel, Switzerland) according to the manufacturers instructions. Nuclei with clear brown staining were regarded as TUNEL-positive apoptotic cells. Cells with positive staining were measured by counting 1,000 cells in each sample and are reported as the means.d.
Cell growth and colony formation assay. Cell growth was measured by the CCK-8 assay (Dojindo, Kumamoto, Japan). In brief, the cells (1 103/well)
were stably transfected with pcDNA3.0-ARRB1-GFP, pcDNA3.0-GFP vector or transfected with ARRB1-siRNA, control-siRNA in a 96-well plate for 24 to 96 h. WST-8 reaction solution (20 ml) was added to cells in 180 ml culture medium, incubated at 37 C for 3 h and measured at a wavelength of 450 nm. Colony formation assay was performed using monolayer culture. Cells (4 105/well) were
plated in a six-well plate and transfected with expression plasmids pcDNA3.0-ARRB1-GFP, pcDNA3.0-ARRB1-HA, pcDNA3.0-ARRB2-HA, pcDNA3.0-GFP or pcDNA3.0-HA vector (2 mg in each) (Kindly provided by Dr Pei G, Chinese
Academy of Sciences, Shanghai) using lipofectamine 2000 (Invitrogen). After 48 h of transfection, the cells were collected and seeded (1 104/well) in a fresh six-well
plate and selected with G418 for 10 days. Colonies containing more than 50 cells were counted after staining with crystal violet solution. All of the experiments were performed in triplicate wells and repeated three times.
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ARTICLE NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | DOI: 10.1038/ncomms8369
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Acknowledgements
We thank Professor Robert J. Lefkowitz at Duke University for providing the ARRB1 KO and ARRB2 KO mice; Professor G. Pei at the Institute of Biochemistry and Cell Biology, Shanghai Institutes for Biological Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences for providing ARRB1 and ARRB2 plasmids; and our doctors and research nurses for their help with collecting the tissue samples. This work was partly supported by grants from the Major Projects Incubator Programme of the National Key Basic Research Programme of China (2012CB526700), the National Natural Science Foundation of China (81370511), the International Cooperative Innovative Platform of Guangdong Province Universities and Colleges (gjhz1101), and the Projects of Guangzhou City International Cooperation (2012J5100017).
Author contributions
Y.Y. and G.Y. contributed equally to this work. Y.Y. designed and performed experiments, analysed data, generated gures and wrote the manuscript. G.Y. designed and performed experiments, analysed data and generated gures. K.B., T.S., T.J., L.H., J.J. and C.J. helped with data interpretation, discussed the hypotheses and participated in the manuscript preparation. C.G. and W.B. supervised the project, designed the experiments, helped with the data interpretation, participated in the data analysis and wrote the manuscript.
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How to cite this article: Yang, Y. et al. b-arrestin1 enhances hepatocellular carcino-genesis through inammation-mediated Akt signalling. Nat. Commun. 6:7369doi: 10.1038/ncomms8369 (2015).
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Copyright Nature Publishing Group Jun 2015
Abstract
G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCR) constitute the largest known superfamily for signal transduction and transmission, and they control a variety of physiological and pathological processes. GPCR adaptor β-arrestins (ARRBs) play a role in cancerous proliferation. However, the effect of ARRBs in inflammation-mediated hepatocellular carcinogenesis is unknown. Here we show that ARRB1, but not ARRB2, is upregulated in inflammation-associated hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and paracancerous tissues in humans. A genotoxic carcinogen, diethylnitrosamine (DEN), significantly induces hepatic inflammation, TNF-α production and ARRB1 expression. Although ARRB1 deficiency does not affect hepatic inflammation and TNF-α production, it markedly represses hepatocellular carcinogenesis by suppressing malignant proliferation in DEN-treated mice. Furthermore, TNF-α directly induces hepatic ARRB1 expression and enhances ARRB1 interaction with Akt by binding to boost Akt phosphorylation, resulting in malignant proliferation of liver cells. Our data suggest that ARRB1 enhances hepatocellular carcinogenesis by inflammation-mediated Akt signalling and that ARRB1 may be a potential therapeutic target for HCC.
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