Protein phosphatase inhibitor-1 mRNA expression correlates with neoplastic transformation of epithelial liver cells and progression of hepatocellular carcinomas

2004 
Protein phosphatase inhibitor-1 plays an important role in the regulation of glycogen metabolism through inhibition of protein phosphatase-1 activity, and it has been implicated in the regulation of cell growth. Using real-time quantitative RT-PCR, we studied the mRNA expression of inhibitor-1 in hepatocellular carcinomas induced in rats by oral administration of N-nitrosomorpholine, and in a non-tumorigenic liver cell line (C 1 I), that stores glycogen in excess during early passages. In late passages, glycogen is gradually lost concomitant with cell transformation. Our in vitro model included a tumorigenic subline of C 1 I cells that was obtained by chemically-induced neoplastic transformation using N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine (C 1 I ct ), and does not store glycogen, as well as Morris hepatoma 3924A (MH3924A) cells. We found that in hepatocellular carcinomas, in the late glycogen-poor passages (C 1 I late ), and in the tumorigenic subline (C 1 I et ) of C 1 I cells, and in MH3924A cells the mRNA expression of inhibitor-1 is significantly increased. This increase in expression varied from 15 to 290-fold of that observed in normal liver. In contrast, in the early glycogen-storing passage of C 1 I cells (C 1 I early ) the level of inhibitor-1 mRNA was found to be slightly less than that of normal liver. Inhibitor-1 mRNA levels correlated with the degree of differentiation of HCCs. These results indicate that the expression of inhibitor-1 mRNA is tightly linked to tumor progression and to the process of liver cell transformation in vitro and is inversely correlated with the glycogen content of the cell.
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