Expression of KiSS-1 gene and its role in invasion and metastasis of human hepatocellular carcinoma.
Shengbing. Zang Z; Feng. Liu Jing LJ; Bin. Wang W; Lingyun. Gao G; Aimin. Huang H
Key Findings
- KiSS-1 protein levels are significantly lower in liver cancer and metastasis compared to normal liver tissue
- Lower KiSS-1 correlates with advanced TNM stage and intra‑hepatic metastasis
- KiSS-1 expression is negatively correlated with MMP‑9 levels, suggesting a link to tumor invasion
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the findings are mostly academic; there’s no clear way to boost KiSS-1 or use kisspeptin‑10 to affect liver cancer risk or progression right now. It highlights a potential future drug target, but no actionable protocol or dosage can be derived from this study.
Summary
The study found that a gene called KiSS-1, which makes a peptide related to kisspeptin-10, is reduced in liver cancer tissue and even lower in tumors that have spread, and this drop is linked to higher cancer stage and more invasion. It also showed that when KiSS-1 is low, another protein that helps cells break down tissue, MMP-9, is higher.
Abstract
KiSS-1 has been identified as a putative metastasis-suppressor gene in human melanomas and breast cancer cell lines. Although loss of KiSS-1 expression has been associated with progression and poor prognosis of various cancers, the exact role of KiSS-1 expression in HCC is not well-defined. Our study investigated KiSS-1 expression levels in HCC and its role in invasion and metastasis of human HCC. The expression levels of KiSS-1 and MMP-9 protein were determined by tissue microarray (TMA) serial sections, immunohistochemistry and semi-quantitative image analysis. All clinical and histological data obtained were subjected to statistical analysis. The expression of KiSS-1 protein in HCC and intrahepatic metastasis lesions was significantly lower (P < 0.01) when compared with non-tumor liver tissue and normal liver tissue. Multivariate analysis revealed a significant inverse correlation between KiSS-1 expression and o1 TNM stage, (F = 7.113, P < 0.01) and o2 intrahepatic metastasis (t = 2.898, P < 0.01). Loss of KiSS-1 in intrahepatic metastasis versus primary carcinomas was statistically significant (P<0.01). We also found a negative correlation between KiSS-1 and MMP-9 expression in HCC (r = -0.506, P < 0.01). We conclude that loss of KiSS-1 during HCC metastasis, along with a concomitant upregulation of MMP-9 suggests a possible mechanism for cell motility and invasion during HCC metastasis, with KiSS-1 emerging as a possible therapeutic target during HCC metastasis.
Study Information
pubmed
2009
2009-08-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1002/ar.20950
41
21