Colorectal Cancer Research Today is a free monthly online journal that collates and summarizes the latest research about Colorectal Cancer, including details on symptoms, genetics, screening, treatment, information. | ||||||||
|
The paracrine hormone hypothesis of colorectal cancer.Pitari GM, Li P, Lin JE, Zuzga D, Gibbons AV, Snook AE, Schulz S, Waldman SA Department of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. Giovanni.Pitari@jefferson.edu Colorectal carcinogenesis originates in the context of dysregulated epithelial cell homeostasis, wherein hyperproliferation, hypodifferentiation, metabolic reprogramming, and mesenchymal remodeling reflect recursive mutually reinforcing mechanisms contributing to progressive genomic instability. Although genotypic and phenotypic elements characterizing the terminal integration of these pathophysiological processes defining cancer are well enumerated, events initiating, coordinating, and sustaining this hierarchical maladaptive systems evolution remain elusive for most tumors. In the intestine, guanylyl cyclase C (GCC) and its paracrine ligands organize and regulate the homeostatic integrity of the crypt-villus axis, forming a hormonal tumor suppressor signaling sequence, whose dysfunction defines the initiation of neoplastic transformation and creates a permissive niche for tumor progression. Published 13 September 2007 in Clin Pharmacol Ther, 82(4): 441-7.
© 2004-2008 Colorectal Cancer Research Today. All Rights Reserved. |
| ||||||