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Publication : Extraintestinal helminth infection reduces the development of colitis-associated tumorigenesis.

First Author  León-Cabrera S Year  2014
Journal  Int J Biol Sci Volume  10
Issue  9 Pages  948-56
PubMed ID  25210492 Mgi Jnum  J:309122
Mgi Id  MGI:6755839 Doi  10.7150/ijbs.9033
Citation  Leon-Cabrera S, et al. (2014) Extraintestinal helminth infection reduces the development of colitis-associated tumorigenesis. Int J Biol Sci 10(9):948-56
abstractText  Colitis-associated colorectal cancer (CAC) is one of the most common cancers and is closely related to chronic or deregulated inflammation. Helminthic infections can modulate inflammatory responses in some diseases, but their immunomodulatory role during cancer development remains completely unknown. We have analyzed the role of Taenia crassiceps-induced anti-inflammatory response in determining the outcome of CAC. We show that extraintestinal T. crassiceps infection in CAC mice inhibited colonic inflammatory responses and tumor formation and prevented goblet cell loss. There was also increased expression of IL-4 and alternatively activated macrophages markers in colonic tissue and negative immunomodulation of pro-inflammatory cytokine expression. In addition, T. crassiceps infection prevented the upregulation of beta-catenin and CXCR2 expression observed in the CAC mice, which are both markers associated with CAC-tumorigenesis, and reduced the numbers of circulating and colonic CD11b(+)Ly6C(hi)CCR2(+) monocytes. Thus, immunomodulatory activities induced by helminth infections may have a role in the progression of CAC.
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