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Publication : Nitric oxide is a key component in inflammation-accelerated tumorigenesis.

First Author  Hussain SP Year  2008
Journal  Cancer Res Volume  68
Issue  17 Pages  7130-6
PubMed ID  18757428 Mgi Jnum  J:138926
Mgi Id  MGI:3806876 Doi  10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-08-0410
Citation  Hussain SP, et al. (2008) Nitric oxide is a key component in inflammation-accelerated tumorigenesis. Cancer Res 68(17):7130-6
abstractText  Nitric oxide (NO(*)), an important signaling molecule and a component of inflammatory response, is involved in tumorigenesis. However, the quantity of NO(*) and the cellular microenvironment influences the role of NO(*) in tumor development. We used a genetic strategy to test the hypothesis that an inflammatory microenvironment with an enhanced level of NO(*) accelerates spontaneous tumor development. C. parvum-induced inflammation and increased NO(*) synthase-2 (NOS2) expression coincided with accelerated spontaneous tumor development, mostly lymphomas, in p53-/-NOS2+/+ C57BL6 mice when compared with the controls (P = 0.001). However, p53-/-NOS2-/- mice did not show any difference in tumor latency between C. parvum-treated and control groups. In C. parvum-treated p53-/-NOS2+/+ mice, tumor development was preceded by a higher expression of NOS2 and phosphorylated Akt-Ser(473) (pAkt-Ser473) in spleen, increased cell proliferation measured by Ki-67 IHC in spleen and thymus, and a lower apoptotic index and CD95-L expression in spleen and thymus. C. parvum-treated p53-/-NOS2+/+ mice showed an increase in the number of Foxp3(+) T-reg cells, dendritic cells (DC), as well as increased CD80(+), CD86(+), CD40(+), and CD83(+) on DC in the spleen. Regulatory T-cells (T-reg) and the maturation of DC may modulate tumorigenesis. An increase in the FoxP3(+)T-reg cells in C. parvum-treated p53-/-NOS2+/+ mice indicates a role of NO(*) in the regulation of T-reg cells that may contribute to a protumor shift of the immune environment favoring an accelerated tumor development. These data provide genetic and mechanistic evidence that an inflammatory microenvironment and an increased level of NO(*) can accelerate tumor development.
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