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Publication : Tumor necrosis factor-α knockout mitigates intestinal inflammation and tumorigenesis in obese Apc(1638N) mice.

First Author  Li J Year  2023
Journal  J Nutr Biochem Volume  117
Pages  109355 PubMed ID  37085057
Mgi Jnum  J:359633 Mgi Id  MGI:7788516
Doi  10.1016/j.jnutbio.2023.109355 Citation  Li J, et al. (2023) Tumor necrosis factor-alpha knockout mitigates intestinal inflammation and tumorigenesis in obese Apc(1638N) mice. J Nutr Biochem 117:109355
abstractText  Strong evidence from observational studies shows that having body fatness is associated with an individual's risk of developing colorectal cancer (CRC), but the causality between obesity and CRC remains inadequately elucidated. Our previous studies have shown diet-induced obesity is associated with elevated TNF-alpha and enhanced activation of Wnt-signaling, yet the causal role of TNF-alpha on intestinal tumorigenesis has not been precisely studied. The present study aims to examine the functionality of TNF-alpha in the development of CRC associated with obesity. We first examined the extent to which diet-induced obesity elevates intestinal tumorigenesis by comparing Apc(1638N) mice fed a low fat diet (LFD, 10 kcal% fat) with those fed a high fat diet (HFD, 60 kcal% fat), and then investigated the degree that the genetic ablation of TNF-alpha attenuates the effect by crossing the TNF-alpha(-/-) mice with Apc(1638N) mice and feeding them with the same HFD (TNF-alpha KO HFD). After 16-weeks of feeding, the HFD significantly increased intestinal tumorigenesis, whereas the deletion of TNF-alpha attenuated the effect (P < .05). Accompanying the changes in macroscopic tumorigenesis, HFD significantly elevated intestinal inflammation and procarcinogenic Wnt-signaling, whereas abolishment of TNF-alpha mitigated the magnitude of these elevations (P < .05). In summary, our findings demonstrate that the knockout of TNF-alpha attenuates obesity-associated intestinal tumorigenesis by decreasing intestinal inflammation and thereby the Wnt-signaling, indicating that TNF-alpha signaling is a potential target that can be utilized to reduce the risk of CRC associated with obesity.
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