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Title: Autoantibodies to IGF-II mRNA binding protein p62 and overexpression of p62 in human hepatocellular carcinoma. Author: Zhang J, Chan EK. Journal: Autoimmun Rev; 2002 May; 1(3):146-53. PubMed ID: 12849008. Abstract: Studies of autoantibodies in systemic rheumatic diseases have provided abundant evidence suggesting that autoimmune responses are antigen-driven and that autoantibodies often can be viewed as reporters of the immune system revealing the identity of antigens which might be playing roles in the pathophysiology of the disease process. Recent data from our laboratory suggest a similar mechanistic process may be involved in humoral immune responses in certain cancers such as hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). HCC is unique in that one can follow a cohort of patients with chronic liver disease who will likely progress to develop malignancy over a period of 10 or more years. It has been observed that during transition from chronic liver disease to HCC, novel autoantibodies can appear which are not detected prior to pre-malignant conditions. The hypothesis is that these novel antibody responses may be stimulated by cellular proteins which are involved in carcinogenesis. By immunoscreening an expression library to isolate cDNA clones of autoantigens, a RNA-binding autoantigen p62 has been identified in HCC recently and autoantibodies to p62 were found in 21% of a cohort of HCC patients. p62 is a cytoplasmic protein which binds to mRNA encoding insulin-like growth factor II (IGF-II), a growth factor which is known to be overexpressed in HCC and is tumorigenic in transgenic animals. The expression of p62 is developmentally regulated, and expressed in fetal, but not in adult liver. Our recent observations showing that p62 was aberrantly expressed in 30% of unselected HCC suggest that it could play a role in HCC and other tumors by upregulating expression of growth factor IGF-II in the milieu of other oncogenic factors.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]