1. Nitric oxide and TNF-[alpha] trigger colonic inflammation and carcinogenesis in Helicobacter hepaticus-infected, Rag2-deficient mice
- Author
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Erdman, S.E., Rao, V.P., Poutahidis, T., Rogers, A.B., Taylor, C.L., Jackson, E.A., Ge, Z., Lee, C.W., Schauer, D.B., Wogan, G.N., Tannenbaum, S.R., and Fox, J.G.
- Subjects
Inflammatory bowel diseases -- Risk factors ,Nitric oxide -- Health aspects ,Colorectal cancer -- Complications and side effects ,Science and technology - Abstract
Recombinase-activating gene-2-deficient ([Rag2.sup.-/-]) mice lacking functional lymphocytes provide a useful model of chronic inflammatory bowel disease-emulating events in human colon cancer. Infection of [Rag2.sup.-/-] mice with Helicobacter hepaticus led to accumulation of macrophages and neutrophils in the colon, a process temporally related to up-regulation of tissue inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) expression at the site of infection and increased nitric oxide (NO) production, as evidenced by urinary excretion of nitrate. Progressive development of increasingly severe inflammation, hyperplasia, dysplasia, and cancer accompanied these changes. Concurrent administration of an iNOS inhibitor prevented NO production and abrogated epithelial pathology and inhibited the onset of cancer. The presence of [Gr-1.sup.+] neutrophils and elevated tumor necrosis factor-[alpha] (TNF-[alpha]) expression in colon were required for increased iNOS expression and cancer, whereas interleukin-10 (IL-10) down-regulated TNF-[alpha] and iNOS expression and suppressed cancer. Anti-inflammatory [CD4.sup.+] regulatory lymphocytes also down-regulated iNOS and reduced cancer formation. Collectively, these results confirm essential roles for inflammation, increased TNF-[alpha] expression, and elevated NO production in colon carcinogenesis. colorectal cancer | IBD | innate immunity
- Published
- 2009