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Promotion of adenoma growth by dietary inulin is associated with increase in cyclin D1 and decrease in adhesion proteins in Min/+ mice mucosa
Authors:Misikangas Marjo  Pajari Anne-Maria  Päivärinta Essi  Mutanen Marja
Institution:Department of Applied Chemistry and Microbiology, Division of Nutrition, P.O. Box 66, 00014 University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland.
Abstract:We have earlier shown that dietary fructo-oligosaccharide inulin enhances adenoma growth in multiple intestinal neoplasia (Min/+) mice. To further explore inulin-induced early biochemical changes in the normal-appearing mucosa, Min/+ mice were fed from the age of 5 weeks to the ages of 8 and 15 weeks a control diet or an inulin-enriched diet (10% w/w). In addition, the wild-type littermates were fed with the same diets until the age of 8 weeks, in order to determine whether similar changes happen both in the wild-type and Min/+ mice. The mucosa without adenomas was collected and fractionated to nuclear, cytosolic and membrane pools. The protein levels of beta-catenin, cyclin D1 and E-cadherin were determined by Western blotting at both time points, and immunohistochemical stainings were done for 8-week-old mice. The promotion of adenoma growth by inulin (week 15, 1.3-fold increase, P=.0004) was associated with accumulation of cytosolic and nuclear beta-catenin, and increased amount of cytosolic cyclin D1 (1.5-fold increase, P=.003) in the normal-appearing mucosa of the Min/+ mice. Furthermore, inulin feeding reduced the membranous pools of beta-catenin and E-cadherin. Also in the wild-type mice the drop in membranous beta-catenin was clear (P=.015), and, moreover, a subset of crypts had enhanced nuclear beta-catenin staining. These data indicate that dietary inulin can already activate in the normal-appearing mucosa beta-catenin signaling, which in the presence of Apc mutation induces adenoma growth and even in the wild-type mice direction of the changes is similar.
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