TY - JOUR
T1 - Chronic inflammation-derived nitric oxide causes conversion of human colonic adenoma cells into adenocarcinoma cells
AU - Tazawa, Hiroshi
AU - Kawaguchi, Tokuichi
AU - Kobayashi, Tokushige
AU - Kuramitsu, Yasuhiro
AU - Wada, Sayori
AU - Satomi, Yoshiko
AU - Nishino, Hoyoku
AU - Kobayashi, Masanobu
AU - Kanda, Yusuke
AU - Osaki, Mitsuhiko
AU - Kitagawa, Tomoyuki
AU - Hosokawa, Masuo
AU - Okada, Futoshi
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported in part by a Grant-in-Aid for Cancer Research from the Japanese Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare and Grant-in-Aid from the Japanese Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology to FO .
PY - 2013/11/1
Y1 - 2013/11/1
N2 - It has been suggested that nitric oxide (NO) derived from chronically inflamed tissues is a cause of carcinogenesis. We herein demonstrated that administration of an inducible NO synthase inhibitor, aminoguanidine, significantly suppressed the tumorigenic conversion of human colonic adenoma (FPCK-1-1) cells into adenocarcinoma (FPCK/Inflam) cells accelerated by foreign body-induced chronic inflammation in nude mice. To determine whether NO directly promotes carcinogenesis, we exposed FPCK-1-1 cells continuously to chemically generated NO (FPCK/NO), and periodically examined their tumorigenicity. FPCK/NO cells formed tumors, whereas vehicle-treated cells (FPCK/NaOH) did not. We selected a tumorigenic population from FPCK/NO cells kept it in three-dimensional (3D) culture where in vivo-like multicellular spheroidal growth was expected. FPCK/Inflam cells developed large spheroids whereas FPCK/NO cells formed tiny but growing compact aggregates in 3D culture. Meanwhile, FPCK-1-1 and FPCK/NaOH cells underwent anoikis (apoptotic cell death consequential on insufficient cell-to-substrate interactions) through activation of caspase 3. The survived cells in the 3D culture (FPCK/NO/3D), which were derived from FPCK/NO cells, showed a similar tumor incidence to that of FPCK/Inflam cells. These results showed that NO was one of the causative factors for the acceleration of colon carcinogenesis, especially in the conversion from adenoma to adenocarcinoma in the chronic inflammatory environment.
AB - It has been suggested that nitric oxide (NO) derived from chronically inflamed tissues is a cause of carcinogenesis. We herein demonstrated that administration of an inducible NO synthase inhibitor, aminoguanidine, significantly suppressed the tumorigenic conversion of human colonic adenoma (FPCK-1-1) cells into adenocarcinoma (FPCK/Inflam) cells accelerated by foreign body-induced chronic inflammation in nude mice. To determine whether NO directly promotes carcinogenesis, we exposed FPCK-1-1 cells continuously to chemically generated NO (FPCK/NO), and periodically examined their tumorigenicity. FPCK/NO cells formed tumors, whereas vehicle-treated cells (FPCK/NaOH) did not. We selected a tumorigenic population from FPCK/NO cells kept it in three-dimensional (3D) culture where in vivo-like multicellular spheroidal growth was expected. FPCK/Inflam cells developed large spheroids whereas FPCK/NO cells formed tiny but growing compact aggregates in 3D culture. Meanwhile, FPCK-1-1 and FPCK/NaOH cells underwent anoikis (apoptotic cell death consequential on insufficient cell-to-substrate interactions) through activation of caspase 3. The survived cells in the 3D culture (FPCK/NO/3D), which were derived from FPCK/NO cells, showed a similar tumor incidence to that of FPCK/Inflam cells. These results showed that NO was one of the causative factors for the acceleration of colon carcinogenesis, especially in the conversion from adenoma to adenocarcinoma in the chronic inflammatory environment.
KW - Anoikis
KW - Chronic inflammation
KW - Colon carcinogenesis
KW - Human colonic adenoma cells
KW - Nitric oxide
KW - Three-dimensional culture
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U2 - 10.1016/j.yexcr.2013.08.006
DO - 10.1016/j.yexcr.2013.08.006
M3 - Article
C2 - 23948305
AN - SCOPUS:84886286889
SN - 0014-4827
VL - 319
SP - 2835
EP - 2844
JO - Experimental Cell Research
JF - Experimental Cell Research
IS - 18
ER -