Apc gene mutation is associated with a dominant-negative effect upon intestinal cell migration |
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Authors: | NN Mahmoud SK Boolbol RT Bilinski C Martucci A Chadburn MM Bertagnolli |
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Affiliation: | The New York Hospital-Cornell University Medical Center, New York 10021, USA. |
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Abstract: | Apc-associated intestinal tumor formation appears to require functional loss of both Apc alleles. Apc has, therefore, been classified as a tumor suppressor gene. Loss of APC protein function results in increased intracellular beta-catenin, a molecule important to both cell-cell adhesion and regulation of cellular growth. In mice bearing a germ-line Apc mutation, we found that enterocyte beta-catenin expression was also increased in histologically normal intestinal mucosa. Enterocyte crypt-villus migration was decreased by 25%, and treatment of Min/+ animals with sulindac sulfide normalized both beta-catenin expression and enterocyte migration. Our data suggest that alterations in enterocyte migration occur in cells bearing a single mutant Apc allele, and that sulindac sulfide may normalize enterocyte growth in these cells. |
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