The Role of Transforming Growth Factor Beta Signaling in Inflammation-Dependent Colon Cancer

Chronic inflammatory conditions such as Crohn's disease (CD) and Ulcerative colitis (UC) are risk factors for colon cancer. TGFβ has been shown to be dysregulated in colon cancer. Bacteria-induced inflammation is necessary for the induction of colon cancer in TGFβ mouse models. However, the mec...

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Main Author: Ball, Corbie
Other Authors: Doetschman, Thomas
Language:en_US
Published: The University of Arizona. 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/593463
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-5934632016-01-16T03:00:32Z The Role of Transforming Growth Factor Beta Signaling in Inflammation-Dependent Colon Cancer Ball, Corbie Doetschman, Thomas Doetschman, Thomas Martinez, Jesse Nelson, Mark FOXP3 Inflammatory Bowel Disease TGF-beta TLR4 Cancer Biology Colon Cancer Chronic inflammatory conditions such as Crohn's disease (CD) and Ulcerative colitis (UC) are risk factors for colon cancer. TGFβ has been shown to be dysregulated in colon cancer. Bacteria-induced inflammation is necessary for the induction of colon cancer in TGFβ mouse models. However, the mechanism by which TGFβ regulates the inflammatory response in these models is not well elucidated. It was our thought that we needed to be able to distinguish what was TGFβ dependent and what was inflammation dependent. To do this we created 2 colonies of Smad3 mice. One colony was housed with normal colonic bacteria (Smad3-uninfected animals) and the other colony (Smad3-infected animals) had chronic H. hepaticus infection. As previously seen the Smad3⁻/⁻- infected animals developed colitis and carcinoma (~40%). In the absence of H. hepaticus infection SMAD3 was found to negatively regulate TLR4 expression. This was then exacerbated with the addition of H. hepaticus resulting extreme up-regulation of TLR4 and the downstream effectors IRAK4 and NF-κB in Smad3⁻/⁻-infected colonic tissues. Examination of adaptive immune regulation in this model demonstrated that SMAD3 was necessary for FOXP3 expression in H. hepaticus-infected splenocytes. Loss of SMAD3 resulted in up-regulation of IL17 and reduced iTreg populations. These data demonstrate the important role SMAD3 has in maintaining tolerance to microbial populations through both the innate and adaptive immune systems. 2015 text Electronic Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/10150/593463 en_US Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona.
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic FOXP3
Inflammatory Bowel Disease
TGF-beta
TLR4
Cancer Biology
Colon Cancer
spellingShingle FOXP3
Inflammatory Bowel Disease
TGF-beta
TLR4
Cancer Biology
Colon Cancer
Ball, Corbie
The Role of Transforming Growth Factor Beta Signaling in Inflammation-Dependent Colon Cancer
description Chronic inflammatory conditions such as Crohn's disease (CD) and Ulcerative colitis (UC) are risk factors for colon cancer. TGFβ has been shown to be dysregulated in colon cancer. Bacteria-induced inflammation is necessary for the induction of colon cancer in TGFβ mouse models. However, the mechanism by which TGFβ regulates the inflammatory response in these models is not well elucidated. It was our thought that we needed to be able to distinguish what was TGFβ dependent and what was inflammation dependent. To do this we created 2 colonies of Smad3 mice. One colony was housed with normal colonic bacteria (Smad3-uninfected animals) and the other colony (Smad3-infected animals) had chronic H. hepaticus infection. As previously seen the Smad3⁻/⁻- infected animals developed colitis and carcinoma (~40%). In the absence of H. hepaticus infection SMAD3 was found to negatively regulate TLR4 expression. This was then exacerbated with the addition of H. hepaticus resulting extreme up-regulation of TLR4 and the downstream effectors IRAK4 and NF-κB in Smad3⁻/⁻-infected colonic tissues. Examination of adaptive immune regulation in this model demonstrated that SMAD3 was necessary for FOXP3 expression in H. hepaticus-infected splenocytes. Loss of SMAD3 resulted in up-regulation of IL17 and reduced iTreg populations. These data demonstrate the important role SMAD3 has in maintaining tolerance to microbial populations through both the innate and adaptive immune systems.
author2 Doetschman, Thomas
author_facet Doetschman, Thomas
Ball, Corbie
author Ball, Corbie
author_sort Ball, Corbie
title The Role of Transforming Growth Factor Beta Signaling in Inflammation-Dependent Colon Cancer
title_short The Role of Transforming Growth Factor Beta Signaling in Inflammation-Dependent Colon Cancer
title_full The Role of Transforming Growth Factor Beta Signaling in Inflammation-Dependent Colon Cancer
title_fullStr The Role of Transforming Growth Factor Beta Signaling in Inflammation-Dependent Colon Cancer
title_full_unstemmed The Role of Transforming Growth Factor Beta Signaling in Inflammation-Dependent Colon Cancer
title_sort role of transforming growth factor beta signaling in inflammation-dependent colon cancer
publisher The University of Arizona.
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/593463
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