| Literature DB >> 30679176 |
Yi Liu1, Yasunori Deguchi1, Rui Tian1,2, Daoyan Wei3, Ling Wu1, Weidong Chen1, Weiguo Xu1, Min Xu1, Fuyao Liu1, Shen Gao1, Jonathan C Jaoude1, Sarah P Chrieki1, Micheline J Moussalli4, Mihai Gagea5, Jeffrey Morris6, Russell R Broaddus4, Xiangsheng Zuo7, Imad Shureiqi7.
Abstract
APC mutations activate aberrant β-catenin signaling to drive initiation of colorectal cancer; however, colorectal cancer progression requires additional molecular mechanisms. PPAR-delta (PPARD), a downstream target of β-catenin, is upregulated in colorectal cancer. However, promotion of intestinal tumorigenesis following deletion of PPARD in Apcmin mice has raised questions about the effects of PPARD on aberrant β-catenin activation and colorectal cancer. In this study, we used mouse models of PPARD overexpression or deletion combined with APC mutation (ApcΔ580 ) in intestinal epithelial cells (IEC) to elucidate the contributions of PPARD in colorectal cancer. Overexpression or deletion of PPARD in IEC augmented or suppressed β-catenin activation via up- or downregulation of BMP7/TAK1 signaling and strongly promoted or suppressed colorectal cancer, respectively. Depletion of PPARD in human colorectal cancer organoid cells inhibited BMP7/β-catenin signaling and suppressed organoid self-renewal. Treatment with PPARD agonist GW501516 enhanced colorectal cancer tumorigenesis in ApcΔ580 mice, whereas treatment with PPARD antagonist GSK3787 suppressed tumorigenesis. PPARD expression was significantly higher in human colorectal cancer-invasive fronts versus their paired tumor centers and adenomas. Reverse-phase protein microarray and validation studies identified PPARD-mediated upregulation of other proinvasive pathways: connexin 43, PDGFRβ, AKT1, EIF4G1, and CDK1. Our data demonstrate that PPARD strongly potentiates multiple tumorigenic pathways to promote colorectal cancer progression and invasiveness. SIGNIFICANCE: These findings address long-standing, important, and unresolved questions related to the potential role of PPARD in APC mutation-dependent colorectal tumorigenesis by showing PPARD activation enhances APC mutation-dependent tumorigenesis. ©2019 American Association for Cancer Research.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30679176 PMCID: PMC6397663 DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-18-1790
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Res ISSN: 0008-5472 Impact factor: 12.701