[HTML][HTML] Multifocal epithelial tumors and field cancerization from loss of mesenchymal CSL signaling

B Hu, E Castillo, L Harewood, P Ostano, A Reymond… - Cell, 2012 - cell.com
B Hu, E Castillo, L Harewood, P Ostano, A Reymond, R Dummer, W Raffoul…
Cell, 2012cell.com
It is currently unclear whether tissue changes surrounding multifocal epithelial tumors are a
cause or consequence of cancer. Here, we provide evidence that loss of mesenchymal
Notch/CSL signaling causes tissue alterations, including stromal atrophy and inflammation,
which precede and are potent triggers for epithelial tumors. Mice carrying a mesenchymal-
specific deletion of CSL/RBP-Jκ, a key Notch effector, exhibit spontaneous multifocal
keratinocyte tumors that develop after dermal atrophy and inflammation. CSL-deficient …
Summary
It is currently unclear whether tissue changes surrounding multifocal epithelial tumors are a cause or consequence of cancer. Here, we provide evidence that loss of mesenchymal Notch/CSL signaling causes tissue alterations, including stromal atrophy and inflammation, which precede and are potent triggers for epithelial tumors. Mice carrying a mesenchymal-specific deletion of CSL/RBP-Jκ, a key Notch effector, exhibit spontaneous multifocal keratinocyte tumors that develop after dermal atrophy and inflammation. CSL-deficient dermal fibroblasts promote increased tumor cell proliferation through upregulation of c-Jun and c-Fos expression and consequently higher levels of diffusible growth factors, inflammatory cytokines, and matrix-remodeling enzymes. In human skin samples, stromal fields adjacent to multifocal premalignant actinic keratosis lesions exhibit decreased Notch/CSL signaling and associated molecular changes. Importantly, these changes in gene expression are also induced by UVA, a known environmental cause of cutaneous field cancerization and skin cancer.
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