Publication: mTORC1 Inactivation Promotes Colitis-Induced Colorectal Cancer but Protects from APC Loss-Dependent Tumorigenesis.
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Dietary habits that can induce inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) are major colorectal cancer (CRC) risk factors, but mechanisms linking nutrients, IBD, and CRC are unknown. Using human data and mouse models, we show that mTORC1 inactivation-induced chromosomal instability impairs intestinal crypt proliferation and regeneration, CDK4/6 dependently. This triggers interleukin (IL)-6-associated reparative inflammation, inducing crypt hyper-proliferation, wound healing, and CRC. Blocking IL-6 signaling or reactivating mTORC1 reduces inflammation-induced CRC, so mTORC1 activation suppresses tumorigenesis in IBD. Conversely, mTORC1 inactivation is beneficial in APC loss-dependent CRC. Thus, IL-6 blockers or protein-rich-diet-linked mTORC1 activation may prevent IBD-associated CRC. However, abolishing mTORC1 can mitigate CRC in predisposed patients with APC mutations. Our work reveals mTORC1 oncogenic and tumor-suppressive roles in intestinal epithelium and avenues to optimized and personalized therapeutic regimens for CRC.
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Adenoma Adenomatous Polyposis Coli Protein Carcinogenesis Cell Proliferation Chromosomal Instability Colitis Colorectal Neoplasms DNA Damage Female HCT116 Cells Homeostasis Humans Inflammation Inflammatory Bowel Diseases Interleukin-6 Intestines Male Mechanistic Target of Rapamycin Complex 1 Nuclear Proteins RNA-Binding Proteins Regeneration Signal Transduction Tumor Suppressor Protein p53
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ell Metab . 2018;27(1):118-135.e8








