Expression of mutant nuclea β-catenin correlates with non-invasive hepatolocellular carcinoma, absence of portal vein spread, and good prognosis
Journal
Journal of Pathology
Journal Volume
193
Journal Issue
1
Pages
95-101
Date Issued
2001
Author(s)
Abstract
β-catenin has functions both in the cadherin-mediated cell adhesion system and in the signalling pathway that mediates dorsal axis patterning in the embryo; it has been shown to be aberrantly expressed or mutated in diverse types of human tumour, but the biological significance of this remains to be clarified. To elucidate the clinical implications of aberrant β-catenin expression and the potential differences between mutant and wild-type β-catenin protein expression in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), the protein expression was analysed by immunohistochemical staining, supplemented by the analysis of gene mutation. Among 372 unifocal primary HCCs, β-catenin was detected in the tumour cell membrane alone in 272 tumours (group A) and also in the nuclei in 100 (group B). In group A, 148 tumours had decreased β-catenin expression, but the reduction did not correlate with invasion or prognosis. When compared with group A, however, group B had significantly lower frequencies of hepatitis B surface antigen carrier (p=0.015), and α-fetoprotein elevation (p=0.0003), but more often had non-invasive HCC (p<0.001) and better survival (p=0.01). Nuclear β-catenin expression strongly correlated with mutation of the gene (p<0.00001). In group B, HCC with mutant nuclear β-catenin correlated positively with non-invasive (stage 1) tumour and inversely with portal vein tumour thrombi (stage 3 HCC), and had significantly better 5-year survival, p<0.001 and p<0.0003, respectively. These results suggest that β-catenin mutation plays an important role in the tumourigenesis of a subset of HCC of good prognosis, and that mutant and wild-type nuclear β-catenin proteins are not functionally equivalent. Copyright ? 2000 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
SDGs
Other Subjects
alpha fetoprotein; beta catenin; hepatitis B surface antigen; mutant protein; nuclear protein; beta catenin; CTNNB1 protein, human; cytoskeleton protein; transactivator protein; tumor marker; tumor protein; adolescent; adult; aged; article; cancer invasion; cancer staging; cancer survival; carcinogenesis; cell adhesion; cell membrane; child; controlled study; correlation function; embryo axis; embryo pattern formation; female; gene mutation; human; human tissue; immunohistochemistry; liver cell carcinoma; major clinical study; male; portal vein; priority journal; prognosis; protein expression; protein localization; signal transduction; tumor cell; tumor thrombus; virus carrier; enzyme immunoassay; follow up; genetics; liver tumor; metabolism; middle aged; mutation; pathology; survival rate; Adolescent; Adult; Aged; Aged, 80 and over; beta Catenin; Carcinoma, Hepatocellular; Child; Cytoskeletal Proteins; Female; Follow-Up Studies; Humans; Immunoenzyme Techniques; Liver Neoplasms; Male; Middle Aged; Mutation; Neoplasm Invasiveness; Neoplasm Proteins; Portal Vein; Prognosis; Survival Rate; Trans-Activators; Tumor Markers, Biological
Type
journal article