Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
3298042 | Gastroenterology | 2010 | 19 Pages |
Abstract
The connection between inflammation and tumorigenesis is well-established and in the last decade has received a great deal of supporting evidence from genetic, pharmacological, and epidemiological data. Inflammatory bowel disease is an important risk factor for the development of colon cancer. Inflammation is also likely to be involved with other forms of sporadic as well as heritable colon cancer. The molecular mechanisms by which inflammation promotes cancer development are still being uncovered and could differ between colitis-associated and other forms of colorectal cancer. Recent work has elucidated the role of distinct immune cells, cytokines, and other immune mediators in virtually all steps of colon tumorigenesis, including initiation, promotion, progression, and metastasis. These mechanisms, as well as new approaches to prevention and therapy, are discussed in this review.
Keywords
STAT3TGF-βTNFTregMMRIKKTLRazoxymethaneIκBAPCcox2IBDPGEAOMDSSCACNF-κBMMPEGFIκB kinaseROSadenomatous polyposis coliinflammationinterferonIFNinterleukinInflammatory bowel diseasetransforming growth factor-βEMTColorectal cancercolitis-associated cancerColon cancerT regulatory cellsDendritic cellsIntestinal epithelial cellsNatural killer cellsdextran sodium sulfateCytokinescyclooxygenase 2epidermal growth factorVascular endothelial growth factorVascular Endothelial Growth Factor (VEGF)tumor necrosis factornuclear factor-κBmatrix metalloproteinasesignal transducer and activator of transcription 3Immunityinhibitor of κBProstaglandinsCRCIECEpithelial–mesenchymal transitionReactive oxygen speciesToll-like receptors
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Authors
JanoÅ¡ TerziÄ, Sergei Grivennikov, Eliad Karin, Michael Karin,