Intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (ICC) is the second most common primary liver tumor with increasing incidence worldwide. Metabolic reprogramming caused by metabolic related gene disorders is a prominent hallmark of tumors, among which Glycogen Synthase 2 (GYS2) is the key gene responsible for regulating cellular energy metabolism, and its expression disorders are closely related to various tumors and glycometabolic diseases. However, we still know nothing about its role in ICC. This study is intended to reveal the functional role of GYS2 in the ICC progress and explore the underlying mechanism. Based on the integrated pan-cancer analysis of GYS2 in the GEPIA database, the expression of GYS2 in paired ICC and adjacent non tumor tissues was detected by qPCR. It was found that the expression of GYS2 was significantly down-regulated in ICC. Further analysis showed that its low expression was not only associated with the degree of pathological differentiation, tumor size, microvascular invasion and lymph node metastasis, but also an independent risk factor for unfavorable prognosis. Functional studies have shown that GYS2 overexpression can significantly impair the proliferation, replication, cloning, migration and invasion of cholangiocarcinoma cells, while the silencing GYS2 dramatically promotes the development of the aforementioned phenotypes, the underlying mechanism may be that GYS2 activates the P53 pathway. In conclusions,low GYS2 expression in ICC predicted unfavorable patient outcomes; GYS2 overexpression could significantly impair the proliferation, migration and invasion of cholangiocarcinoma cells via activating the P53 pathway and GYS2 was expected to become a potential therapeutic target for such patients.
Keywords: Intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma; P53 signaling pathway; glycogen synthase 2; prognosis.