Current Issues in Molecular Biology (Apr 2023)

Infliximab Inhibits Colitis Associated Cancer in Model Mice by Downregulating Genes Associated with Mast Cells and Decreasing Their Accumulation

  • Dan-Yang Wang,
  • Shinobu Ohnuma,
  • Hideyuki Suzuki,
  • Masaharu Ishida,
  • Kentaro Ishii,
  • Takashi Hirosawa,
  • Tomoaki Hirashima,
  • Megumi Murakami,
  • Minoru Kobayashi,
  • Katsuyoshi Kudoh,
  • Sho Haneda,
  • Hiroaki Musha,
  • Takeshi Naitoh,
  • Michiaki Unno

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cimb45040189
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 45, no. 4
pp. 2895 – 2907

Abstract

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Inflammatory bowel diseases (IBDs), such as Crohn’s disease or ulcerative colitis, can be treated with anti TNF-alpha (TNF-α) antibodies (Abs), but they also put patients with IBDs at risk of cancer. We aimed to determine whether the anti TNF-α Ab induces colon cancer development in vitro and in vivo, and to identify the genes involved in colitis-associated cancer. We found that TNF-α (50 ng/mL) inhibited the proliferation, migration, and invasion of HCT8 and COLO205 colon cancer cell lines and that anti TNF-α Ab neutralized TNF-α inhibition in vitro. The effects of anti TNF-α Ab, infliximab (10 mg/kg) were investigated in mouse models of colitis-associated cancer induced by intraperitoneally injected azoxymethane (AOM: 10 mg/kg)/orally administered dextran sodium sulfate (DSS: 2.5%) (AOM/DSS) in vivo. Infliximab significantly attenuated the development of colon cancer in these mice. Microarray analyses and RT-qPCR revealed that mast cell protease 1, mast cell protease 2, and chymase 1 were up-regulated in cancer tissue of AOM/DSS mice; however, those mast cell related genes were downregulated in cancer tissue of AOM/DSS mice with infliximab. These results suggested that mast cells play a pivotal role in the development of cancer associated with colitis in AOM/DSS mice.

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