| Literature DB >> 24382972 |
Dang Wu1, Pin Wu1, Qi Huang1, Yang Liu1, Jun Ye1, Jian Huang1.
Abstract
It is widely accepted that chronic inflammation plays an active role in cancer. Inflammatory immunocytes and related cytokines in the tumor microenvironment are supposed to be a "double-edged sword" in colorectal cancer (CRC) initiation and progression. Interleukin-17 (IL-17), a pleiotropic proinflammatory cytokine, can promote cancer-elicited inflammation and prevent cancer cells from immune surveillance. Despite controversy, IL-17 is generally considered to be a promoter in CRC progression. In this review, we devote to summarize the current progress regarding the role of IL-17 in tumor initiation and progression, as well as the prognostic value in CRC.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24382972 PMCID: PMC3870650 DOI: 10.1155/2013/436307
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Dev Immunol ISSN: 1740-2522
Figure 1This is an illustration about the protumor activity of IL-17 in CRC microenvironment. Blue colored arrow shows cells producing IL-17. Black arrow shows the latter stimulated by the former. T-shaped arrow shows process inhibited by IL-17 and lightning arrow shows attack on tumor cells.
Role of IL-17 in CRC.
| Species | Mediators | Findings | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tumor promoting role | |||
| Human | VEGF | IL-17 induces both CRC cell lines and primary cancer cells to produce VEGF. | [ |
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| Human | HIF-1 | IL-17 and TNF | [ |
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| Mouse | Stat 3 | IL-23/IL-17 signaling activated by microbial products promotes STAT3 phosphorylation in CRC epithelial cells. | [ |
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| Mouse | VEGF, KC, and PGE2 | IL-17 promotes angiogenesis via induction of a variety of proangiogenic factors secretion from fibroblasts and tumors. | [ |
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| Mouse | IL-6, IL-23, and IL-1 | IL-6, IL-23, IL-1 | [ |
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| Mouse | IL-6, STAT3, and TNF- | IL-17A knockout decreases IL-6, STAT3, TNF- | [ |
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| Mouse | G-CSF, VEGF, and Bv8 | IL-17 induces the expression of G-CSF through NF- | [ |
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| Tumor inhibiting activity | |||
| Mouse | IFN- | IL-17-deficient decreases IFN- | [ |
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| Human | Claudin | IL-17 enhances the development of the tight junctional barrier mediated by claudin of T84-cell monolayers via ERK MAPK pathway in intestine. | [ |
Expression of IL-17 in CRC patients.
| Sample type | Sample size | Findings | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Serum and tissue | 74 CRC tissues and paired normal mucosa, 61 CRC serum samples, and 78 healthy controls | No significant difference is observed. | [ |
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| Serum and tissue | 59 CRC tissues, 40 CRC serum samples, and 37 healthy controls | IL-17 acts as a valuable tumor marker in CRC patients. | [ |
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| Tissue | 12 CRC patients | Hypoxia induce the expression of IL-17 in Foxp3+ Tregs, which drive cancer cells to be cancer-initiating cells. | [ |
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| Tissue | 125 CRC tissues and 3 normal tissues | IL-17 gene expression level is higher in tumor tissues compared to normal mucosa. | [ |
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| Tissue | 52 CRC patients | IL-17 expression is negatively correlated with OS of CRC patients. | [ |
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| Tissue | 22 CRC patients | Tumor-infiltrating Foxp3+ IL-17+ T cells suppress tumor-specificCD8+T cells response via IL-17. | [ |
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| Serum and tissue | 9 ulcerative colitis-associated CRC tissues | IL-17+ Foxp3+ CD4+ T cells are selectively accumulated in the colitis-associated CRC niche. | [ |
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| Tissue | 50 colorectal adenomas tissues, 50 CRC tissues, and 15 healthy controls | IL-17 level is associated with the severity of dysplastic degree. | [ |
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| Tissue | 23 CRC patients | Tumor-infiltrating TH17 cells and Bv8-expressing neutrophils are associated with poor outcome in CRC. | [ |