4.5 Article

Cocarcinogenic Effects of Intrahepatic Bile Acid Accumulation in Cholangiocarcinoma Development

Journal

MOLECULAR CANCER RESEARCH
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages 91-100

Publisher

AMER ASSOC CANCER RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1158/1541-7786.MCR-13-0503

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Spanish Instituto de Salud Carlos III [FIS PI11/00337, PI12/00380]
  2. Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion [SAF2010-15517]
  3. Junta de Castilla y Leon [SAN673SA07/08, BIO39/SA27/10, SA070A11-2, SA023A11-2, BIO/03/SA23/11, SA015U13, BIO/SA64/13, BIO/SA65/13]
  4. Fundacion Investigacion Mutua Madrilena
  5. Asociacion Espanola Contra el Cancer (AECC)
  6. Fondo Social Europeo/Junta de Castilla y Leon

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Bile acid accumulation in liver with cholangiolar neoplastic lesions may occur before cholestasis is clinically detected. Whether this favors intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma development has been investigated in this study. The E. coli RecA gene promoter was cloned upstream from Luc2 to detect in vitro direct genotoxic ability by activation of SOS genes. This assay demonstrated that bile acids were not able to induce DNA damage. The genotoxic effect of the DNA-damaging agent cisplatin was neither enhanced nor hindered by the hepatotoxic and hepatoprotective glycochenodeoxycholic and glycoursodeoxycholic acids, respectively. In contrast, thioacetamide metabolites, but not thioacetamide itself, induced DNA damage. Thus, thioacetamide was used to induce liver cancer in rats, which resulted in visible tumors after 30 weeks. The effect of bile acid accumulation on initial carcinogenesis phase (8 weeks) was investigated in bile duct ligated (BDL) animals. Serum bile acid measurement and determination of liver-specific healthy and tumor markers revealed that early thioacetamide treatment induced hypercholanemia together with upregulation of the tumor marker Neu in bile ducts, which were enhanced by BDL. Bile acid accumulation was associated with increased expression of interleukin (IL)-6 and downregulation of farnesoid X receptor (FXR). Bile duct proliferation and apoptosis activation, with inverse pattern (BDL > thioacetamide + BDL >> thioacetamide vs. thioacetamide > thioacetamide + BDL > BDL), were observed. In conclusion, intrahepatic accumulation of bile acids does not induce carcinogenesis directly but facilitates a cocarcinogenic effect due to stimulation of bile duct proliferation, enhanced inflammation, and reduction in FXR-dependent chemoprotection.

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