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SPOCK1 Promotes the Development of Hepatocellular Carcinoma

Lóránd Váncza, Katalin Karászi, Bálint Péterfia, Lilla Turiák, Katalin Dezső, Anna Sebestyén, Andrea Reszegi, Gábor Petővári, András Kiss, Z Schaff, Kornélia Baghy, Ilona Kovalszky

2022Frontiers in Oncology17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The extracellular matrix proteoglycan SPOCK1 is increasingly recognized as a contributor to the development and progression of cancers. Here, we study how SPOCK1, which is present in non-tumorous hepatocytes at low concentrations, promotes the development and progression of malignant hepatocellular tumors. Although SPOCK1 is an extracellular matrix proteoglycan, its concentration increases in the cytoplasm of hepatocytes starting with very low expression in the normal cells and then appearing in much higher quantities in cells of cirrhotic human liver and hepatocellular carcinoma. This observation is similar to that observed after diethylnitrosamine induction of mouse hepatocarcinogenesis. Furthermore, syndecan-1, the major proteoglycan of the liver, and SPOCK1 are in inverse correlation in the course of these events. In hepatoma cell lines, the cytoplasmic SPOCK1 colocalized with mitochondrial markers, such as MitoTracker and TOMM20, a characteristic protein of the outer membrane of the mitochondrion and could be detected in the cell nucleus. SPOCK1 downregulation of hepatoma cell lines by siRNA inhibited cell proliferation, upregulated p21 and p27, and interfered with pAkt and CDK4 expression. A tyrosine kinase array revealed that inhibition of SPOCK1 in the liver cancer cells altered MAPK signaling and downregulated several members of the Sarc family, all related to the aggressivity of the hepatoma cell lines. These studies support the idea that SPOCK1 enhancement in the liver is an active contributor to human and rodent hepatocarcinogenesis and cancer progression. However, its mitochondrial localization raises the possibility that it has a currently unidentified physiological function in normal hepatocytes.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyExtracellular matrixDownregulation and upregulationCancer researchHepatocellular carcinomaHCCSLiver cancerCell biologyCancer cellCellCancerGeneBiochemistryGeneticsLiver Disease Diagnosis and TreatmentLiver physiology and pathologyBone and Dental Protein Studies