Hepatocellular carcinomas, exhibiting intratumor fibrosis, express cancer-specific extracellular matrix remodeling and WNT/TGFB signatures, associated with poor outcome
- PMID: 36999534
- DOI: 10.1097/HEP.0000000000000362
Hepatocellular carcinomas, exhibiting intratumor fibrosis, express cancer-specific extracellular matrix remodeling and WNT/TGFB signatures, associated with poor outcome
Abstract
Background and aims: HCC, the third leading cause of cancer-related death, arises in the context of liver fibrosis. Although HCC is generally poorly fibrogenic, some tumors harbor focal intratumor extracellular matrix (ECM) deposits called "fibrous nests." To date, the molecular composition and clinical relevance of these ECM deposits have not been fully defined.
Approach and results: We performed quantitative matrisome analysis by tandem mass tags mass spectrometry in 20 human cancer specific matrisome (HCCs) with high or low-grade intratumor fibrosis and matched nontumor tissues, as well as in 12 livers from mice treated with vehicle, carbon tetrachloride, or diethylnitrosamine. We found 94 ECM proteins differentially abundant between high and low-grade fibrous nests, including interstitial and basement membrane components, such as several collagens, glycoproteins, proteoglycans, enzymes involved in ECM stabilization and degradation, and growth factors. Pathway analysis revealed a metabolic switch in high-grade fibrosis, with enhanced glycolysis and decreased oxidative phosphorylation. Integrating the quantitative proteomics with transcriptomics from HCCs and nontumor livers (n = 2,285 samples), we identified a subgroup of fibrous nest HCCs, characterized by cancer-specific ECM remodeling, expression of the WNT/TGFB (S1) subclass signature, and poor patient outcome. Fibrous nest HCCs abundantly expressed an 11-fibrous-nest - protein signature, associated with poor patient outcome, by multivariate Cox analysis, and validated by multiplex immunohistochemistry.
Conclusions: Matrisome analysis highlighted cancer-specific ECM deposits, typical of the WNT/TGFB HCC subclass, associated with poor patient outcomes. Hence, histologic reporting of intratumor fibrosis in HCC is of clinical relevance.
Copyright © 2023 American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases.
Comment in
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Matrisomic characterization of HCC to inform individualized patient management.Hepatology. 2023 Sep 1;78(3):691-693. doi: 10.1097/HEP.0000000000000443. Epub 2023 May 11. Hepatology. 2023. PMID: 37163234 Free PMC article. No abstract available.
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