Increased expression of nucleophosmin/B23 in hepatocellular carcinoma and correlation with clinicopathological parameters

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Abstract

Nucleophosmin (NPM, B23, numatrin, NO38) is an abundant nucleolar phosphoprotein involved in multiple cellular functions. Previous evidence indicates that high-level expression of NPM causes uncontrolled cell growth and suggests that NPM may have oncogenic potential. In this study, we examined NPM expression in 103 paired cases of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), 12 cases of hepatic focal nodular hyperplasia, 17 cases of liver tissue adjacent to a hepatic haemangioma, and series of array tissues from normal human organs and malignancies using a monoclonal antibody against NPM and reverse transcription-PCR techniques, Western blot analysis, immunohistochemistry, and immunocytofluorescence. Our data indicated that NPM expression was significantly higher in HCC than in the non-malignant hepatocytes (P<0.001). Nucleophosmin was weakly expressed in hepatocytes from a 5-month-old embryo and in stationary hepatocytes of healthy adults. Moreover, enhanced expression of NPM in HCC correlated with the level of PCNA (R2=0.5639) and with the clinical prognostic parameters such as serum alpha fetal protein level, tumour pathological grading, and liver cirrhosis (P<0.05). Our results suggest that NPM may play an important role in the progression of tumorigenesis and that NPM may serve as a potential marker for HCC. © 2007 Cancer Research.

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Yun, J. P., Miao, J., Chen, G. G., Tian, Q. H., Zhang, C. Q., Xiang, J., … Lai, P. B. S. (2007). Increased expression of nucleophosmin/B23 in hepatocellular carcinoma and correlation with clinicopathological parameters. British Journal of Cancer, 96(3), 477–484. https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.bjc.6603574

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