| Literature DB >> 29134640 |
Nese Unver1, Oliver Delgado1, Kirubel Zeleke1, Amber Cumpian2, Ximing Tang3, Mauricio S Caetano2, Hong Wang1, Hiroyuki Katayama1, Hua Yu4, Eva Szabo5, Ignacio I Wistuba3, Seyed Javad Moghaddam2, Samir M Hanash1, Edwin J Ostrin2,6.
Abstract
Several promising chemopreventive agents have for lung cancer emerged in preclinical models and in retrospective trials. These agents have been shown to modulate pathways altered in carcinogenesis and reduce markers of carcinogenesis in animal and cell culture models. Cancer-prone transgenic mice with oncogenic Kras expressed in the airway epithelium (CcspCre/+ ; KrasLSL-G12D/+ ) were raised on diets compounded with myo-inositol. These animals form lung premalignant lesions in a stereotypical fashion over the ten weeks following weaning. Mice raised on myo-inositol containing diets showed potent reduction in the number, size, and stage of lesions as compared to those raised on control diets. myo-inositol has previously been reported to inhibit phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) signaling. However, in mice raised on myo-inositol, total PI3K signaling was largely unaffected. Proteomic and cytokine analyses revealed large reduction in IL-6 related pathways, including STAT3 phosphorylation. This effect was not due to direct inhibition of IL-6 production and autocrine signaling within the tumor cell, but rather through alteration in macrophage recruitment and in phenotype switching, with an increase in antitumoral M1 macrophages.Entities:
Keywords: IL-6; Kras; chemoprevention; lung cancer; lung cancer chemoprevention; myo-inositol
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29134640 PMCID: PMC5805587 DOI: 10.1002/ijc.31152
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Cancer ISSN: 0020-7136 Impact factor: 7.396