Back to Search Start Over

Targeting clinical epigenetic reprogramming for chemoprevention of metabolic and viral hepatocellular carcinoma

Authors :
Ju¨hling, Frank
Hamdane, Nourdine
Crouchet, Emilie
Li, Shen
El Saghire, Houssein
Mukherji, Atish
Fujiwara, Naoto
Oudot, Marine A
Thumann, Christine
Saviano, Antonio
Roca Suarez, Armando Andres
Goto, Kaku
Masia, Ricard
Sojoodi, Mozhdeh
Arora, Gunisha
Aikata, Hiroshi
Ono, Atsushi
Tabrizian, Parissa
Schwartz, Myron
Polyak, Stephen J
Davidson, Irwin
Schmidl, Christian
Bock, Christoph
Schuster, Catherine
Chayama, Kazuaki
Pessaux, Patrick
Tanabe, Kenneth K
Hoshida, Yujin
Zeisel, Mirjam B
Duong, Francois HT
Fuchs, Bryan C
Baumert, Thomas F
Source :
Gut; 2021, Vol. 70 Issue: 1 p157-169, 13p
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

ObjectiveHepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the fastest-growing cause of cancer-related mortality with chronic viral hepatitis and non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) as major aetiologies. Treatment options for HCC are unsatisfactory and chemopreventive approaches are absent. Chronic hepatitis C (CHC) results in epigenetic alterations driving HCC risk and persisting following cure. Here, we aimed to investigate epigenetic modifications as targets for liver cancer chemoprevention.DesignLiver tissues from patients with NASH and CHC were analysed by ChIP-Seq (H3K27ac) and RNA-Seq. The liver disease-specific epigenetic and transcriptional reprogramming in patients was modelled in a liver cell culture system. Perturbation studies combined with a targeted small molecule screen followed by in vivoand ex vivovalidation were used to identify chromatin modifiers and readers for HCC chemoprevention.ResultsIn patients, CHC and NASH share similar epigenetic and transcriptomic modifications driving cancer risk. Using a cell-based system modelling epigenetic modifications in patients, we identified chromatin readers as targets to revert liver gene transcription driving clinical HCC risk. Proof-of-concept studies in a NASH-HCC mouse model showed that the pharmacological inhibition of chromatin reader bromodomain 4 inhibited liver disease progression and hepatocarcinogenesis by restoring transcriptional reprogramming of the genes that were epigenetically altered in patients.ConclusionOur results unravel the functional relevance of metabolic and virus-induced epigenetic alterations for pathogenesis of HCC development and identify chromatin readers as targets for chemoprevention in patients with chronic liver diseases.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00175749 and 14683288
Volume :
70
Issue :
1
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Gut
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs54824605
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/gutjnl-2019-318918