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  • Haploinsufficiency of Casitas B-Lineage Lymphoma Augments the Progression of Colon Cancer in the Background of Adenomatous Polyposis Coli Inactivation.

Haploinsufficiency of Casitas B-Lineage Lymphoma Augments the Progression of Colon Cancer in the Background of Adenomatous Polyposis Coli Inactivation.

The American journal of pathology (2020-03-03)
Sean Richards, Joshua Walker, Masako Nakanishi, Mostafa Belghasem, Chimera Lyle, Nkiruka Arinze, Marc A Napoleon, Jonathan D Ravid, Nicholas Crossland, Qing Zhao, Daniel Rosenberg, Nader Rahimi, Vipul C Chitalia
RÉSUMÉ

Casitas B-lineage lymphoma (c-Cbl) is a recently identified ubiquitin ligase of nuclear β-catenin and a suppressor of colorectal cancer (CRC) growth in cell culture and mouse tumor xenografts. We hypothesized that reduction in c-Cbl in colonic epithelium is likely to increase the levels of nuclear β-catenin in the intestinal crypt, augmenting CRC tumorigenesis in an adenomatous polyposis coli (APCΔ14/+) mouse model. Haploinsufficient c-Cbl mice (APCΔ14/+ c-Cbl+/-) displayed a significant (threefold) increase in atypical hyperplasia and adenocarcinomas in the small and large intestines; however, no differences were noted in the adenoma frequency. In contrast to the APCΔ14/+ c-Cbl+/+ mice, APCΔ14/+ c-Cbl+/- crypts showed nuclear β-catenin throughout the length of the crypts and up-regulation of Axin2, a canonical Wnt target gene, and SRY-box transcription factor 9, a marker of intestinal stem cells. In contrast, haploinsufficiency of c-Cbl+/- alone was insufficient to induce tumorigenesis regardless of an increase in the number of intestinal epithelial cells with nuclear β-catenin and SRY-box transcription factor 9 in APC+/+ c-Cbl+/- mice. This study demonstrates that haploinsufficiency of c-Cbl results in Wnt hyperactivation in intestinal crypts and accelerates CRC progression to adenocarcinoma in the milieu of APCΔ14/+, a phenomenon not found with wild-type APC. While emphasizing the role of APC as a gatekeeper in CRC, this study also demonstrates that combined partial loss of c-Cbl and inactivation of APC significantly contribute to CRC tumorigenesis.

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Anticorps anti-SOX9, from rabbit, purified by affinity chromatography