Inflammation-Related Carcinogenesis: Lessons from Animal Models to Clinical Aspects

Inflammation-related carcinogenesis has long been known as one of the carcinogenesis patterns in humans. Common carcinogenic factors are inflammation caused by infection with pathogens or the uptake of foreign substances from the environment into the body. Inflammation-related carcinogenesis as a ca...

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Main Authors: Futoshi Okada, Runa Izutsu, Keisuke Goto, Mitsuhiko Osaki
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-02-01
Series:Cancers
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2072-6694/13/4/921
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spelling doaj-5fac0026065a4c1f8f3ca821e4d2bcb72021-02-23T00:04:52ZengMDPI AGCancers2072-66942021-02-011392192110.3390/cancers13040921Inflammation-Related Carcinogenesis: Lessons from Animal Models to Clinical AspectsFutoshi Okada0Runa Izutsu1Keisuke Goto2Mitsuhiko Osaki3Division of Experimental Pathology, Faculty of Medicine, Tottori University, Yonago 683-8503, JapanDivision of Experimental Pathology, Faculty of Medicine, Tottori University, Yonago 683-8503, JapanDivision of Experimental Pathology, Faculty of Medicine, Tottori University, Yonago 683-8503, JapanDivision of Experimental Pathology, Faculty of Medicine, Tottori University, Yonago 683-8503, JapanInflammation-related carcinogenesis has long been known as one of the carcinogenesis patterns in humans. Common carcinogenic factors are inflammation caused by infection with pathogens or the uptake of foreign substances from the environment into the body. Inflammation-related carcinogenesis as a cause for cancer-related death worldwide accounts for approximately 20%, and the incidence varies widely by continent, country, and even region of the country and can be affected by economic status or development. Many novel approaches are currently available concerning the development of animal models to elucidate inflammation-related carcinogenesis. By learning from the oldest to the latest animal models for each organ, we sought to uncover the essential common causes of inflammation-related carcinogenesis. This review confirmed that a common etiology of organ-specific animal models that mimic human inflammation-related carcinogenesis is prolonged exudation of inflammatory cells. Genotoxicity or epigenetic modifications by inflammatory cells resulted in gene mutations or altered gene expression, respectively. Inflammatory cytokines/growth factors released from inflammatory cells promote cell proliferation and repair tissue injury, and inflammation serves as a “carcinogenic niche”, because these fundamental biological events are common to all types of carcinogenesis, not just inflammation-related carcinogenesis. Since clinical strategies are needed to prevent carcinogenesis, we propose the therapeutic apheresis of inflammatory cells as a means of eliminating fundamental cause of inflammation-related carcinogenesis.https://www.mdpi.com/2072-6694/13/4/921inflammation-related carcinogenesisanimal modelstherapeutic apheresis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Futoshi Okada
Runa Izutsu
Keisuke Goto
Mitsuhiko Osaki
spellingShingle Futoshi Okada
Runa Izutsu
Keisuke Goto
Mitsuhiko Osaki
Inflammation-Related Carcinogenesis: Lessons from Animal Models to Clinical Aspects
Cancers
inflammation-related carcinogenesis
animal models
therapeutic apheresis
author_facet Futoshi Okada
Runa Izutsu
Keisuke Goto
Mitsuhiko Osaki
author_sort Futoshi Okada
title Inflammation-Related Carcinogenesis: Lessons from Animal Models to Clinical Aspects
title_short Inflammation-Related Carcinogenesis: Lessons from Animal Models to Clinical Aspects
title_full Inflammation-Related Carcinogenesis: Lessons from Animal Models to Clinical Aspects
title_fullStr Inflammation-Related Carcinogenesis: Lessons from Animal Models to Clinical Aspects
title_full_unstemmed Inflammation-Related Carcinogenesis: Lessons from Animal Models to Clinical Aspects
title_sort inflammation-related carcinogenesis: lessons from animal models to clinical aspects
publisher MDPI AG
series Cancers
issn 2072-6694
publishDate 2021-02-01
description Inflammation-related carcinogenesis has long been known as one of the carcinogenesis patterns in humans. Common carcinogenic factors are inflammation caused by infection with pathogens or the uptake of foreign substances from the environment into the body. Inflammation-related carcinogenesis as a cause for cancer-related death worldwide accounts for approximately 20%, and the incidence varies widely by continent, country, and even region of the country and can be affected by economic status or development. Many novel approaches are currently available concerning the development of animal models to elucidate inflammation-related carcinogenesis. By learning from the oldest to the latest animal models for each organ, we sought to uncover the essential common causes of inflammation-related carcinogenesis. This review confirmed that a common etiology of organ-specific animal models that mimic human inflammation-related carcinogenesis is prolonged exudation of inflammatory cells. Genotoxicity or epigenetic modifications by inflammatory cells resulted in gene mutations or altered gene expression, respectively. Inflammatory cytokines/growth factors released from inflammatory cells promote cell proliferation and repair tissue injury, and inflammation serves as a “carcinogenic niche”, because these fundamental biological events are common to all types of carcinogenesis, not just inflammation-related carcinogenesis. Since clinical strategies are needed to prevent carcinogenesis, we propose the therapeutic apheresis of inflammatory cells as a means of eliminating fundamental cause of inflammation-related carcinogenesis.
topic inflammation-related carcinogenesis
animal models
therapeutic apheresis
url https://www.mdpi.com/2072-6694/13/4/921
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AT runaizutsu inflammationrelatedcarcinogenesislessonsfromanimalmodelstoclinicalaspects
AT keisukegoto inflammationrelatedcarcinogenesislessonsfromanimalmodelstoclinicalaspects
AT mitsuhikoosaki inflammationrelatedcarcinogenesislessonsfromanimalmodelstoclinicalaspects
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