Literature DB >> 19771320

GCC signaling in colorectal cancer: Is colorectal cancer a paracrine deficiency syndrome?

P Li1, J E Lin, G P Marszlowicz, M A Valentino, C Chang, S Schulz, G M Pitari, Scott A Waldman.   

Abstract

Guanylyl cyclase C (GCC) is the receptor expressed by intestinal cells for the paracrine hormones guanylin and uroguanylin that coordinate mucosal homeostasis and its silencing contributes to intestinal transformation. It orchestrates proliferative and metabolic circuits by limiting the cell cycle and programming metabolic transitions central to regeneration along the crypt-villus axis. Mice deficient in GCC are more susceptible to colon cancer induced by germline mutations or carcinogens. Moreover, guanylin and uroguanylin are the most commonly lost gene products in colon cancer. The role of GCC as a tumor suppressor and the universal loss of its hormones in transformation suggest a paradigm in which colorectal cancer is a disease of paracrine hormone insufficiency. Indeed, GCC signaling reverses the tumorigenic phenotype of human colon cancer cells by regulating proliferation and metabolism. These data suggest a pathophysiological hypothesis in which GCC is a tumor suppressor coordinating proliferative homeostasis whose silencing through hormone loss initiates transformation. The correlative therapeutic hypothesis suggests that colorectal cancer is a disease of hormone insufficiency that can be prevented or treated by oral hormone replacement therapy employing GCC ligands. Copyright 2009 Prous Science, S.A.U. or its licensors. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19771320      PMCID: PMC3136746          DOI: 10.1358/dnp.2009.22.6.1395254

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Drug News Perspect        ISSN: 0214-0934


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2.  The paracrine hormone for the GUCY2C tumor suppressor, guanylin, is universally lost in colorectal cancer.

Authors:  Chantell Wilson; Jieru E Lin; Peng Li; Adam E Snook; Jianping Gong; Takahiro Sato; Chengbao Liu; Melanie A Girondo; Hallgeir Rui; Terry Hyslop; Scott A Waldman
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