RhoA downregulation in the murine intestinal epithelium results in chronic Wnt activation and increased tumorigenesis
Author
Date
2024-04-19Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/11351/11267DOI
10.1016/j.isci.2024.109400
ISSN
2589-0042
PMID
38523777
Abstract
Rho GTPases are molecular switches regulating multiple cellular processes. To investigate the role of RhoA in normal intestinal physiology, we used a conditional mouse model overexpressing a dominant negative RhoA mutant (RhoAT19N) in the intestinal epithelium. Although RhoA inhibition did not cause an overt phenotype, increased levels of nuclear β-catenin were observed in the small intestinal epithelium of RhoAT19N mice, and the overexpression of multiple Wnt target genes revealed a chronic activation of Wnt signaling. Elevated Wnt signaling in RhoAT19N mice and intestinal organoids did not affect the proliferation of intestinal epithelial cells but significantly interfered with their differentiation. Importantly, 17-month-old RhoAT19N mice showed a significant increase in the number of spontaneous intestinal tumors. Altogether, our results indicate that RhoA regulates the differentiation of intestinal epithelial cells and inhibits tumor initiation, likely through the control of Wnt signaling, a key regulator of proliferation and differentiation in the intestine.
Keywords
Cancer; Cell biologyBibliographic citation
Dopeso H, Rodrigues P, Cartón-García F, Macaya I, Bilic J, Anguita E, et al. RhoA downregulation in the murine intestinal epithelium results in chronic Wnt activation and increased tumorigenesis. iScience. 2024 Apr 19;27(4):109400.
Audience
Professionals
This item appears in following collections
- HVH - Articles científics [4476]
- VHIR - Articles científics [1751]
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