4.8 Article

Loss of Cyclin E1 attenuates hepatitis and hepatocarcinogenesis in a mouse model of chronic liver injury

Journal

ONCOGENE
Volume 37, Issue 25, Pages 3329-3339

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41388-018-0181-8

Keywords

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Funding

  1. German Cancer Foundation (Deutsche Krebshilfe) [107682, SFB TRR/57]
  2. Interdisciplinary Centre for Clinical Research (IZKF Aachen) within the Faculty of Medicine
  3. RWTH Aachen

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Chronic liver injury triggers liver fibrosis and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), the third leading cause of cancer-related mortality. Cyclin E1 (CcnE1, formerly designated Cyclin E) is a regulatory subunit of the Cyclin-dependent kinase 2 (CDK2). It is overexpressed in approximately 70% of human HCCs correlating with poor prognosis, while the relevance of its orthologue Cyclin E2 (CcnE2) is unclear. Hepatocyte-specific deletion of NF-kappa-B essential modulator (NEMO Delta hepa) leads to chronic hepatitis, liver fibrosis, and HCC as well as CcnE upregulation. To this end, we generated NEMO Delta hepa/CcnE1(-/-) and NEMO Delta hepa/CcnE2(-/-) double knockout mice and investigated age-dependent liver disease progression in these animals. Deletion of CcnE1 in NEMO Delta hepa mice decreased basal liver damage and reduced spontaneous liver inflammation in young mice. In contrast, loss of CcnE2 did not affect liver injury in NEMO Delta hepa livers pointing to a unique, non-redundant function of CcnE1 in chronic hepatitis. Accordingly, basal compensatory hepatocyte proliferation in NEMO Delta hepa mice was reduced by concomitant ablation of CcnE1, but not after loss of CcnE2. In aged NEMO.hepa mice, loss of CcnE1 resulted in significant reduction of liver tumorigenesis, while deletion of CcnE2 had no effect on HCC formation. CcnE1, but not its orthologue CcnE2, substantially contributes to hepatic inflammatory response, liver disease progression, and hepatocarcinogenesis in NEMO Delta hepa mice.

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