Acceleration of the PanIN Development in Mice Expressing Oncogenic K-Ras Due to a High Fat Diet
Data(s) |
01/05/2013
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Resumo |
Obesity is postulated to be one of the major risk factors for pancreatic cancer, and recently it was indicated that an elevated body mass index (BMI correlates strongly with a decrease in patient survival. Despite the evident relationship, the molecular mechanisms involved are unclear. Oncogenic mutation of K-Ras is found early and is universal in pancreatic cancer. Extensive evidence indicates oncogenic K-Ras is not entirely active and it requires a triggering event to surpass the activity of Ras beyond the threshold necessary for a Ras-inflammation feed-forward loop. We hypothesize that high fat intake induces a persistent low level inflammatory response triggering increased K-Ras activity and that Cox-2 is essential for this inflammatory reaction. To determine this, LSL-K-Ras mice were crossed with Ela-CreER (Acinar-specific) or Pdx-1-Cre (Pancreas-specific) to “knock-in” oncogenic K-Ras. Additionally, these animals were crossed with Cox-2 conditional knockout mice to access the importance of Cox-2 in the inflammatory loop present. The mice were fed isocaloric diets containing 60% energy or 10% energy from fat. We found that a high fat diet increased K-Ras activity, PanIN formation, and fibrotic stroma significantly compared to a control diet. Genetic deletion of Cox-2 prevented high fat diet induced fibrosis and PanIN formation in oncogenic K-Ras expressing mice. Additionally, long term consumption of high fat diet, increased the progression of PanIN lesions leading to invasive cancer and decreased overall survival rate. These findings indicate that a high fat diet can stimulate the activation of oncogenic K-Ras and initiate an inflammatory feed forward loop requiring Cox-2 leading to inflammation, fibrosis, and PanINs. This mechanism could explain the relationship between a high fat diet and elevated risk for pancreatic cancer. |
Formato |
application/pdf |
Identificador |
http://digitalcommons.library.tmc.edu/utgsbs_dissertations/356 http://digitalcommons.library.tmc.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1391&context=utgsbs_dissertations |
Publicador |
DigitalCommons@The Texas Medical Center |
Fonte |
UT GSBS Dissertations and Theses (Open Access) |
Palavras-Chave | #K-Ras #Obesity #High Fat Diet #Cox-2 #Pancreatic Cancer #PDAC #Biology #Cancer Biology #Medicine and Health Sciences #Other Nutrition |
Tipo |
text |