The competitive reverse transcriptional polymerase chain reaction was employed to amplify HNF-1 and vHNF-1 mRNA simultaneously and to examine their expression ratio in total RNA extracted from frozen liver tissues of 37 patients with hepatocellular carcinoma, five patients with hepatoblastoma, and 15 non-neoplastic liver tissues.
It has been demonstrated that the hepatocyte nuclear factor 1 (HNF1) binding site is critical for the majority of the hepatitis B virus (HBV) large surface antigen promoter activity in differentiated hepatoma cell lines.
These results suggest that the extremely proximal promoter region of the AFP gene where glucocorticoid-responsive element and HNF-1 binding sites exist is not responsible for the re-expression of AFP in HCC.
Expression of the same dominant negative mutant in human hepatoma HepG2 cells only partially inhibited endogenous LFB1 activity, due to stabilization of LFB1 dimers in these cells.
This indicates that the preferential expression from the large surface antigen promoter in the differentiated hepatoma cell lines is probably mediated by HNF1 or an HNF1-related transcription factor.