Prostaglandins and activation of AC/cAMP prevents anoikis in IEC-18 |
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Authors: | R.?R.?Joseph E.?Yazer Y.?Hanakawa A.?W.?StadnykEmail author |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Microbiology & Immunology and the Dalhousie Inflammation Group, Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS, Canada;(2) Department of Pediatrics and the Dalhousie Inflammation Group, Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS, Canada;(3) Department of Dermatology, School of Medicine, Ehime University, Ehime, Japan;(4) Mucosal Immunology Research, IWK Health Centre, 5850 University Ave., Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada, B3K 6R8 |
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Abstract: | Recent data indicates that chronic inflammation of the intestine such as Crohn's or ulcerative colitis puts those individuals
at heightened risk for colorectal adenocarcinoma. In this study, we examine the effect of the inflammatory mediator PGE2 and associated signalling on detachment-induced cell death (anoikis) in intestinal epithelial cells. Treatment of detached
IEC-18 with 0.01–0.05 μM PGE2 increased cell viability as well as induced aggregation. As EP4 prostaglandin receptors on IEC are coupled to adenylate cyclase,
we next treated cells with agents that promote cAMP signalling (Forskolin, dbcAMP, and etazolate), all of which promoted IEC
aggregation as well as survival. We next treated detached IECs with specific inhibitors of adenylate cyclase or PKA, which
accelerated anoikis. To explore the mechanism of cell-cell adhesion, we next treated detached IECs with an anti-E-cadherin
blocking antibody which dispersed aggregates induced by dbcAMP, and an adenovirus expressing a dominant negative E-cadherin
(EcadΔEC) prevented aggregate formation. Interestingly EcadΔEC prevented aggregation of IEC induced by dbcAMP but did not
significantly reduce viability. This suggests that cAMP signalling is important in both aggregate formation and promoting
viability but these are distinct events. Taken together, these data support a mechanism whereby elevated PGE2 levels characteristic of colitis prevent anoikis by activating an AC-, cAMP-, and PKA-dependent signalling pathway. The delay
of apoptosis by PGE2 may be one mechanism by which inflammation may contribute to carcinogenesis. |
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Keywords: | anoikis cancer epithelium inflammation intestine prostaglandin |
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