31 research outputs found
Mechanical factors activate Ī²-catenin-dependent oncogene expression in APC1638Nā+ mouse colon
Ī²-catenin acts as a critical regulator of gastrointestinal homeostasis
through its control of the Wnt signaling pathway, and genetic or epigenetic
lesions which activate Wnt signaling are the primary feature of colon cancer.
Ī²-catenin is also a key element of mechanotranscription pathways, leading
to upregulation of master developmental gene expression during Drosophila gastrulation,
or regulating mammalian bone development and maintenance. Here we investigate
the impact of mechanical stimulation on the initiation of colon cancer. Myc
and Twist1, two oncogenes regulated through Ī²-catenin, are expressed
in response to transient compression in APC deficient (APC1638Nā+)
colon tissue explants, but not in wild-type colon explants. Mechanical stimulation
of APC1638Nā+ tissue leads to the phosphorylation
of Ī²-catenin at tyrosine 654, the site of interaction with E-cadherin,
as well as to increased nuclear localization of Ī²-catenin. The mechanical
activation of Myc and Twist1 expression in APC1638Nā+ colon
can be prevented by blocking Ī²-catenin phosphorylation using Src kinase
inhibitors. Microenvironmental signals are known to cooperate with genetic
lesions to promote the nuclear Ī²-catenin accumulation which drives colon
cancer. Here we demonstrate that when APC is limiting, mechanical strain,
such as that associated with intestinal transit or tumor growth, can be interpreted
by cells of preneoplastic colon tissue as a signal to initiate a Ī²-catenin
dependent transcriptional program characteristic of cancer