Human colon carcinoma cells that overexpressed MMP9 showed decreased cell proliferation, less DNA damage and cell cycle arrest.
Highlights
- Matrix-metalloproteinase (MMP9) suppresses tumors and ulcers in the colon.
- The activity of MMP9 is undetectable in most healthy adult tissues but it is highly expressed in a variety of inflammatory states.
- MMP9 increases apoptosis, initiates cell cycle arrest and keeps a check on DNA damage.
Previous studies have shown that MMP9 derived from epithelial cells plays a protective role in the development of CAC. Epithelial cells represent the lining of the gastrointestinal tract along the lumen, which is the inside space of a tubular structure. Almost 80 percent of cancers have epithelial cell origin. This study aimed to determine whether epithelial-derived MMP9 has a defensive role of tumor suppressor in CAC and the underlying molecular mechanism.
Inflammation can be a beneficial response to tissue damage or pathogens, but if unregulated it can become chronic inflammation and induce malignant cells in tissue that lead to cancer.
Inflammatory bowel disease, which includes ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease, involves inflammation of all or part of the digestive tract. Patients with chronically active ulcerative colitis have a significantly higher risk (up to 50 percent depending on the group of subjects) of developing CAC, a subtype of colorectal cancer. The risk of CAC increases with the duration of the disease and the severity of inflammation.
The protein expression and activity of MMP9 is undetectable in most healthy adult tissues, including the colon and intestine, but it is highly expressed in a variety of inflammatory states.
The researchers found mice that expressed MMP9 in the epithelium exhibited fewer tumors and increased apoptosis, or programmed cell death that gets rid of cells that are no longer needed or are a threat to the organism. Human colon carcinoma cells that overexpressed MMP9 showed decreased cell proliferation, less DNA damage and cell cycle arrest in the S-phase to prevent cell proliferation.
Reference
- Dr. Pallavi Garg, Enzyme could protect against type of colorectal cancer by suppressing tumors, study finds, Oncotarget (2016).
Source-Medindia