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Loss of TP53 cooperates with c-MET overexpression to drive hepatocarcinogenesis.

Authors :
Zhou, Yi
Zhou, Yi
Cui, Guofei
Xu, Hongwei
Chun, Joanne
Yang, Doris
Zhang, Zheng
Yang, Lihui
Wang, Jingxiao
Wan, Meijuan
Calvisi, Diego
Lin, Shumei
Wang, Haichuan
Chen, Xin
Zhou, Yi
Zhou, Yi
Cui, Guofei
Xu, Hongwei
Chun, Joanne
Yang, Doris
Zhang, Zheng
Yang, Lihui
Wang, Jingxiao
Wan, Meijuan
Calvisi, Diego
Lin, Shumei
Wang, Haichuan
Chen, Xin
Source :
Cell Death and Disease; vol 14, iss 7
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is a deadly malignancy with high genetic heterogeneity. TP53 mutation and c-MET activation are frequent events in human HCCs. Here, we discovered that the simultaneous mutations in TP53 and activation of c-MET occur in ~20% of human HCCs, and these patients show a poor prognosis. Importantly, we found that concomitant deletion of Trp53 and overexpression of c-MET (c-MET/sgp53) in the mouse liver led to HCC formation in vivo. Consistent with human HCCs, RNAseq showed that c-MET/sgp53 mouse HCCs were characterized by activated c-MET and Ras/MAPK cascades and increased tumor cell proliferation. Subsequently, a stably passaged cell line derived from a c-MET/sgp53 HCC and corresponding subcutaneous xenografts were generated. Also, in silico analysis suggested that the MEK inhibitor trametinib has a higher inhibition score in TP53 null human HCC cell lines, which was validated experimentally. We consistently found that trametinib effectively inhibited the growth of c-MET/sgp53 HCC cells and xenografts, supporting the possible usefulness of this drug for treating human HCCs with TP53-null mutations. Altogether, our study demonstrates that loss of TP53 cooperates with c-MET to drive hepatocarcinogenesis in vivo. The c-MET/sgp53 mouse model and derived HCC cell lines represent novel and useful preclinical tools to study hepatocarcinogenesis in the TP53 null background.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Cell Death and Disease; vol 14, iss 7
Notes :
application/pdf, Cell Death and Disease vol 14, iss 7
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1401035952
Document Type :
Electronic Resource