Journal of Experimental & Clinical Cancer Research (Jun 2019)

Viral integration drives multifocal HCC during the occult HBV infection

  • Xiao-Ping Chen,
  • Xin Long,
  • Wen-long Jia,
  • Han-Jie Wu,
  • Jing Zhao,
  • Hui-Fang Liang,
  • Arian Laurence,
  • Jun Zhu,
  • Dong Dong,
  • Yan Chen,
  • Long Lin,
  • Yu-Dong Xia,
  • Wei-Yang Li,
  • Gui-Bo Li,
  • Zhi-Kun Zhao,
  • Kui Wu,
  • Yong Hou,
  • Jing-Jing Yu,
  • Wei Xiao,
  • Guo-Ping Wang,
  • Peng-Cheng Zhu,
  • Wei Chen,
  • Ming-Zhou Bai,
  • Yi-Xing Jian,
  • Karsten Kristiansen,
  • Qian Chen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13046-019-1273-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 38, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Background & Aims Although the prognosis of patients with occult hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection (OBI) is usually benign, a small portion may undergo cirrhosis and subsequently hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). We studied the mechanism of life-long Integration of virus DNA into OBI host’s genome, of which may induce hepatocyte transformation. Methods We applied HBV capture sequencing on single cells from an OBI patient who, developed multiple HCC tumors and underwent liver resection in May 2013 at Tongji Hospital in China. Despite with the undetectable virus DNA in serum, we determined the pattern of viral integration in tumor cells and adjacent non-tumor cells and obtained the details of the viral arrangement in host genome, and furthermore the HBV integrated region in cancer genome. Results HBV captured sequencing of tissues and individual cells revealed that samples from multiple tumors shared two viral integration sites that could affect three host genes, including CSMD2 on chr1 and MED30/EXT1 on chr8. Whole genome sequencing further indicated one hybrid chromosome formed by HBV integrations between chr1 and chr8 that was shared by multiple tumors. Additional 50 poorly differentiated liver tumors and the paired adjacent non-tumors were evaluated and functional studies suggested up-regulated EXT1 expression promoted HCC growth. We further observed that the most somatic mutations within the tumor cell genome were common among the multiple tumors, suggesting that HBV associated, multifocal HCC is monoclonal in origin. Conclusion Through analyzing the HBV integration sites in multifocal HCC, our data suggested that the tumor cells were monoclonal in origin and formed in the absence of active viral replication, whereas the affected host genes may subsequently contribute to carcinogenesis.

Keywords