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Publication : Genes involved in the immediate early response and epithelial-mesenchymal transition are regulated by adipocytokines in the female reproductive tract.

First Author  Yang Z Year  2012
Journal  Mol Reprod Dev Volume  79
Issue  2 Pages  128-37
PubMed ID  22128093 Mgi Jnum  J:180816
Mgi Id  MGI:5307941 Doi  10.1002/mrd.22006
Citation  Yang Z, et al. (2012) Genes involved in the immediate early response and epithelial-mesenchymal transition are regulated by adipocytokines in the female reproductive tract. Mol Reprod Dev 79(2):128-37
abstractText  Obesity increases the risk of female reproductive tract cancers, but the underlying mechanistic link between the two is ill-defined. Thus, the objective of the current study was to identify obesity-dependent changes in the expression of immediate early (IE) genes that contribute to cell proliferation and differentiation, and epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) genes that promote cell migration. When HeLa cells were treated for 0-48 hr with IGF-1, leptin, TNFalpha, or IL-6, each individual adipocytokine altered the abundance of IE (cJUN, cFOS, and cMYC) and EMT (SNAI1, SNAI2, and TWIST1) mRNA abundance. For example, IGF-1 increased cJUN and cFOS and decreased cMYC; leptin increased cFOS; IL-6 increased cFOS and cMYC; and TNFalpha increased cJUN and cFOS mRNA abundance. Likewise, EMT gene expression was altered by IGF-1, TNFalpha, and IL-6. SNAI1 was increased by IGF-1 and IL-6; SNAI2 was increased by IGF-1 and TNFalpha; and TWIST1 was increased by TNFalpha and IL-6. Chronic exposure to adipocytokines also altered EMT gene expression in the whole uterus of obese compared to normal-weight mice. Specifically, there was no difference in cJun, cFos, or cMyc mRNA abundance between normal-weight and obese animals. Snai1, Snai2, and Twist1 mRNA abundance, however, was increased in the uterus of obese females and correlated with increased circulating IGF-1 levels. These data indicate that obesity-dependent alterations in adipocytokine levels regulate the expression of genes associated with cell proliferation and migration, and therefore may provide a plausible mechanism for obesity-dependent increases in cancers of the female reproductive tract.
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