Z Gastroenterol 2015; 53 - A4_36
DOI: 10.1055/s-0034-1397188

Nuclear CYLD expression plays a role in HCC therapy response in vitro

C Elssner 1, S Welte 1, AL Scherr 1, BC Koehler 1, H Schulze-Bergkamen 2
  • 1National Center for Tumor Diseases, Division of Medical Oncology, Heidelberg, Germany
  • 2Marien-Hospital Wesel, Gastroenterology, Wesel, Germany

The deubiquitinase CYLD removes K63-linked ubiquitin chains from molecules involved, e.g., in NF-kB, Wnt/ß-catenin and BCL-3 signaling pathways. CYLD is dysregulated in different cancers, including hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Loss of CYLD is characterized by enhanced NF-κB-signaling and increased cell survival. In previous studies, we demonstrated decreased levels of CYLD expression in human HCC. In recent analysis of CYLD expression in tissue microarrays, survival analysis of HCC patients after resection revealed a more favorable outcome of patients with positive nuclear CYLD expression. We hypothesize that reconstitution of CYLD is a promising approach for the treatment of liver diseases and the sensitization of HCC cells towards therapy-induced cell death. To assess the regulation of CYLD by different treatment strategies, HCC cell lines will be treated with chemotherapeutic agents and targeted agents. After treatment, CYLD expression levels including subcellular localization will be measured and cell death induction will be assessed by different analysis. Those targeted agents, which result in a decrease or no alteration of CYLD levels will be used for treatment of HCC cells, previously transfected with CYLD expression plasmids. Cell death induction will be assessed to test, whether CYLD upregulation sensitizes HCC cells to the respective targeted therapy.

Another subproject intends to investigate the influence of CYLD on the migration and invasive potential of HCC cell lines in vitro. After CYLD downregulation, cells will be grown in 3D polystyrene scaffolds, which provide a suitable surrounding for long time cell growth. Scaffolds will be further processed for cryosectioning followed by immunostaining to investigate the expression levels of CYLD, Bcl-2 proteins and markers for EMT, migration and proliferation. The invasion depth will be assessed as well.

Corresponding author: Elssner, Christin

E-Mail: christin.elssner@nct-heidelberg.de