| Literature DB >> 24920319 |
A De Lerma Barbaro1, G Perletti1, I M Bonapace1, E Monti1.
Abstract
The observation that cancer often arises at sites of chronic inflammation has prompted the idea that carcinogenesis and inflammation are deeply interwoven. In fact, the current literature highlights a role for chronic inflammation in virtually all the steps of carcinogenesis, including tumor initiation, promotion and progression. The aim of the present article is to review the current literature on the involvement of chronic inflammation in the initiation step and in the very early phases of tumorigenesis, in a type of cancer where adult stem cells are assumed to be the cells of origin of neoplasia. Since the gastrointestinal tract is regarded as the best-established model system to address the liaison between chronic inflammation and neoplasia, the focus of this article will be on intestinal cancer. In fact, the anatomy of the intestinal epithelial lining is uniquely suited to study adult stem cells in their niche, and the bowel crypt is an ideal developmental biology system, as proliferation, differentiation and cell migration are all distributed linearly along the long axis of the crypt. Moreover, crypt stem cells are regarded today as the most likely targets of neoplastic transformation in bowel cancer. More specifically, the present review addresses the molecular mechanisms whereby a state of chronic inflammation could trigger the neoplastic process in the intestine, focusing on the generation of inflammatory cues evoking enhanced proliferation in cells not initiated but at risk of neoplastic transformation because of their stemness. Novel experimental approaches, based on triggering an inflammatory stimulus in the neighbourhood of adult intestinal stem cells, are warranted to address some as yet unanswered questions. A possible approach, the targeted transgenesis of Paneth cells, may be aimed at 'hijacking' the crypt stem cell niche from a status characterized by the maintenance of homeostasis to local chronic inflammation, with the prospect of initiating neoplastic transformation in that site.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24920319 PMCID: PMC4121412 DOI: 10.3892/ijo.2014.2490
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Oncol ISSN: 1019-6439 Impact factor: 5.650
Figure 1Major steps of sporadic/familial (top) and colitis-associated colon carcinogenesis (bottom). Notably, APC mutations have been shown to appear early in sporadic/familial colonic oncogenesis, and at a later stage in colitis-associated cancer. Conversely, p53 appears to follow an opposite pattern of involvement. Modified from ref. 18.
Figure 2Investigation of intestine carcinogenesis by ectopic expression of pro/anti-inflammatory cytokine transgenes in Paneth cells. To obtain the spatial and temporal control of transgene expression, a creERT2 construct encoding the cre recombinase fused to a tamoxifen-activated ERT2 mutant estrogen ligand binding domain may be used (87). A cell-specific promoter region [cryptdin-2 for Paneth cells (102) or mucin-2 for goblet cell (103)] drives the transcription of the fusion recombinase whereas the gene of interest (coding for a pro-inflammatory or an anti-inflammatory cytokine) is cloned downstream a housekeeping promoter (β-actin), but it is not expressed due to a loxP-flanked (floxed) STOP cassette. In chimeric mice that bear both trasgenes, exposure to tamoxifen may drive the cre-mediated deletion of the floxed STOP cassette, and hence the conditional expression of the cytokine in the cell of interest (i.e., Paneth or goblet cells). In this figure the direct targets of the ectopic cytokine are adjacent epithelial cells; alternatively, the action of the cytokine may be indirectly mediated through a stromal cell, most likely of myeloid lineage, as reported by Tu et al (95). Candidate pro-inflammatory or anti-inflammatory cytokines for transgenic expression may be TNFα or IL-10, respectively. In order to produce a substantial effect on cancer onset, this transgenic model should be coupled with a treatment predisposing to cancer in the intestine (e.g., a CAC regimen). In the figure stem and trans-amplifying cells are shown in different gray shades, whereas fully differentiated post-mitotic cells are shown in white.