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A Two-Step Model for Colon Adenoma Initiation and Progression Caused by APC Loss
Author(s) -
Reid A. Phelps,
Stephanie Chidester,
Somaye Dehghanizadeh,
Jason Phelps,
Imelda T. Sandoval,
Kunal Rai,
Talmage Broadbent,
Sharmistha Sarkar,
Randall W. Burt,
David A. Jones
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 26.304
H-Index - 776
eISSN - 1097-4172
pISSN - 0092-8674
DOI - 10.1016/j.cell.2009.02.037
Subject(s) - biology , adenomatous polyposis coli , wnt signaling pathway , cancer research , catenin , kras , beta catenin , zebrafish , downregulation and upregulation , nuclear localization sequence , cell growth , adenoma , corepressor , mutation , microbiology and biotechnology , colorectal cancer , signal transduction , cytoplasm , cancer , genetics , nuclear receptor , transcription factor , gene
Aberrant Wnt/beta-catenin signaling following loss of the tumor suppressor adenomatous polyposis coli (APC) is thought to initiate colon adenoma formation. Using zebrafish and human cells, we show that homozygous loss of APC causes failed intestinal cell differentiation but that this occurs in the absence of nuclear beta-catenin and increased intestinal cell proliferation. Therefore, loss of APC is insufficient for causing beta-catenin nuclear localization. APC mutation-induced intestinal differentiation defects instead depend on the transcriptional corepressor C-terminal binding protein-1 (CtBP1), whereas proliferation defects and nuclear accumulation of beta-catenin require the additional activation of KRAS. These findings suggest that, following APC loss, CtBP1 contributes to adenoma initiation as a first step, whereas KRAS activation and beta-catenin nuclear localization promote adenoma progression to carcinomas as a second step. Consistent with this model, human FAP adenomas showed robust upregulation of CtBP1 in the absence of detectable nuclear beta-catenin, whereas nuclear beta-catenin was detected in carcinomas.

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