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Adenoma Formation following Limited Ablation of p120-Catenin in the Mouse Intestine

p120 loss destabilizes E-cadherin and could therefore result in tumor and/or metastasis-promoting activities similar to those caused by E-cadherin downregulation. Previously, we reported that p120 is essential in the intestine for barrier function, epithelial homeostasis and survival. Conditional p1...

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Autores principales: Smalley-Freed, Whitney G., Efimov, Andrey, Short, Sarah P., Jia, Peilin, Zhao, Zhongming, Washington, M. Kay, Robine, Sylvie, Coffey, Robert J., Reynolds, Albert B.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3096651/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21611205
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0019880
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author Smalley-Freed, Whitney G.
Efimov, Andrey
Short, Sarah P.
Jia, Peilin
Zhao, Zhongming
Washington, M. Kay
Robine, Sylvie
Coffey, Robert J.
Reynolds, Albert B.
author_facet Smalley-Freed, Whitney G.
Efimov, Andrey
Short, Sarah P.
Jia, Peilin
Zhao, Zhongming
Washington, M. Kay
Robine, Sylvie
Coffey, Robert J.
Reynolds, Albert B.
author_sort Smalley-Freed, Whitney G.
collection PubMed
description p120 loss destabilizes E-cadherin and could therefore result in tumor and/or metastasis-promoting activities similar to those caused by E-cadherin downregulation. Previously, we reported that p120 is essential in the intestine for barrier function, epithelial homeostasis and survival. Conditional p120 ablation in the mouse intestine induced severe inflammatory bowel disease, but long-term cancer-related studies were impossible because none of the animals survived longer than 21 days. Here, we used a tamoxifen-inducible mouse model (Vil-Cre-ER(T2);p120(fl/fl)) to limit the extent of p120 ablation and thereby enable long-term studies. Reducing p120 KO to ∼10% of the intestinal epithelium produced long-lived animals outwardly indistinguishable from controls. Effects of prolonged p120 absence were then evaluated at intervals spanning 2 to 18 months. At all time points, immunostaining revealed microdomains of p120-null epithelium interspersed with normal epithelium. Thus, stochastic p120 ablation is compatible with crypt progenitor cell function and permitted lifelong renewal of the p120-null cells. Consistent with previous observations, a barrier defect and frequent infiltration of neutrophils was observed, suggesting that focal p120 loss generates a microenvironment disposed to chronic inflammation. We report that 45% of these animals developed tumors within 18 months of tamoxifen induction. Interestingly, β-catenin was upregulated in the majority, but none of the tumors were p120 null. Although further work is required to directly establish mechanism, we conclude that limited p120 ablation can promote tumorigenesis by an indirect non-cell autonomous mechanism. Given that byproducts of inflammation are known to be highly mutagenic, we suggest that tumorigenesis in this model is ultimately driven by the lifelong inability to heal chronic wounds and the substantially increased rates of stochastic gene mutation in tissue microenvironments subjected to chronic inflammation. Indeed, although technical issues precluded direct identification of mutations, β-catenin upregulation in human colon cancer almost invariably reflects mutations in APC and/or β-catenin.
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spelling pubmed-30966512011-05-24 Adenoma Formation following Limited Ablation of p120-Catenin in the Mouse Intestine Smalley-Freed, Whitney G. Efimov, Andrey Short, Sarah P. Jia, Peilin Zhao, Zhongming Washington, M. Kay Robine, Sylvie Coffey, Robert J. Reynolds, Albert B. PLoS One Research Article p120 loss destabilizes E-cadherin and could therefore result in tumor and/or metastasis-promoting activities similar to those caused by E-cadherin downregulation. Previously, we reported that p120 is essential in the intestine for barrier function, epithelial homeostasis and survival. Conditional p120 ablation in the mouse intestine induced severe inflammatory bowel disease, but long-term cancer-related studies were impossible because none of the animals survived longer than 21 days. Here, we used a tamoxifen-inducible mouse model (Vil-Cre-ER(T2);p120(fl/fl)) to limit the extent of p120 ablation and thereby enable long-term studies. Reducing p120 KO to ∼10% of the intestinal epithelium produced long-lived animals outwardly indistinguishable from controls. Effects of prolonged p120 absence were then evaluated at intervals spanning 2 to 18 months. At all time points, immunostaining revealed microdomains of p120-null epithelium interspersed with normal epithelium. Thus, stochastic p120 ablation is compatible with crypt progenitor cell function and permitted lifelong renewal of the p120-null cells. Consistent with previous observations, a barrier defect and frequent infiltration of neutrophils was observed, suggesting that focal p120 loss generates a microenvironment disposed to chronic inflammation. We report that 45% of these animals developed tumors within 18 months of tamoxifen induction. Interestingly, β-catenin was upregulated in the majority, but none of the tumors were p120 null. Although further work is required to directly establish mechanism, we conclude that limited p120 ablation can promote tumorigenesis by an indirect non-cell autonomous mechanism. Given that byproducts of inflammation are known to be highly mutagenic, we suggest that tumorigenesis in this model is ultimately driven by the lifelong inability to heal chronic wounds and the substantially increased rates of stochastic gene mutation in tissue microenvironments subjected to chronic inflammation. Indeed, although technical issues precluded direct identification of mutations, β-catenin upregulation in human colon cancer almost invariably reflects mutations in APC and/or β-catenin. Public Library of Science 2011-05-17 /pmc/articles/PMC3096651/ /pubmed/21611205 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0019880 Text en Smalley-Freed et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Smalley-Freed, Whitney G.
Efimov, Andrey
Short, Sarah P.
Jia, Peilin
Zhao, Zhongming
Washington, M. Kay
Robine, Sylvie
Coffey, Robert J.
Reynolds, Albert B.
Adenoma Formation following Limited Ablation of p120-Catenin in the Mouse Intestine
title Adenoma Formation following Limited Ablation of p120-Catenin in the Mouse Intestine
title_full Adenoma Formation following Limited Ablation of p120-Catenin in the Mouse Intestine
title_fullStr Adenoma Formation following Limited Ablation of p120-Catenin in the Mouse Intestine
title_full_unstemmed Adenoma Formation following Limited Ablation of p120-Catenin in the Mouse Intestine
title_short Adenoma Formation following Limited Ablation of p120-Catenin in the Mouse Intestine
title_sort adenoma formation following limited ablation of p120-catenin in the mouse intestine
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3096651/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21611205
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0019880
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