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Risk
Factors in Colon Carcinogenesis:
Recent Advances in Preclinical Modeling of the Disease
The stepwise development of colorectal cancer results in
part from the accumulation of specific mutations in cells
of the colonic crypts. Perhaps the most important of these
mutations are those resulting in loss-of-function of the
tumor suppressor gene APC. These mutations are observed
in as many as 85% of colorectal cancers, and appear to be
responsible for initiating events in development of premalignant
colorectal polyps. The frequency by which these and other
mutations occur in the colon will be affected by environmental
influences, particularly diet. In fact, there is abundant
epidemiological evidence that dietary factors may be partly
responsible for the differences in colon cancer rates between
different populations. Although some of the evidence is
controversial, it has been suggested that an increased risk
of colorectal cancer may be related to diets that are high
in saturated fat, low in fiber, or deficient in calcium,
vitamin D, or folic acid.

Evaluating Diet in Animal Models
One way to investigate the role of particular dietary factors
in colorectal cancer is to make use of animal models of
the disease and test directly the effect of specific diets
on tumor incidence. A research group led by Dr.
Martin Lipkin at the Strang Cancer Prevention Center
has been a leader in this line of investigation for many
years. Although standard rodent models such as laboratory
mice have been valuable for revealing the harmful effects
of potent carcinogens, it has been much more difficult to
demonstrate that dietary factors have a significant impact
on cancer in these animals, possibly because the increased
risk from diet may be relatively small. And while it is
a significant factor over the life span of a human, it is
rarely manifest during the 2 to 3 year life of a mouse.
In his investigations, Dr. Lipkin has taken two approaches
to overcome this limitation. First, his research group has
assayed the occurrence of colonic crypt dysplasias and focal
hyperplasias as endpoints, rather than carcinomas. They
found that these lesions, which are thought to represent
the earliest stages of the progression from normal tissue
to cancer, are induced in mice fed a Western-style
diet that is high in fat and low in calcium and vitamin
D.1 Even after 2 years, however, no adenomas or adenocarcinomas
developed. More recently, Dr. Lipkin and colleagues have
modified the Western-style mouse diet to mimic
the low folic acid content of diets consumed by certain
human populations at increased risk for cancer. After 18
months on this diet, there was both adenoma and carcinoma
development in the colon, and 42% of the mice developed
tumors.2 This result is an important proof of principle,
representing the first report of the dietary induction of
colon cancer in normal rodents without the presence of a
chemical carcinogen or targeted gene mutation that accelerates
carcinogenesis. This and similar preclinical model systems
can now be used to evaluate the contributions of specific
dietary components, and also the potentially beneficial
effects of chemopreventive agents in conjunction with a
high-risk diet.
Other Research Methods
Another means of examining the effects of chemical carcinogens,
dietary components, and chemopreventive agents has been
through use of cell or tissue culture model systems, in
which the consequences for cell growth rate, transformation
parameters, and programmed cell death can be evaluated directly.
Dr. Nitin Telang at the Strang Cancer Prevention Center
has previously developed several such systems based on primary
cultures of either breast or colon epithelium. These have
been commonly derived from wild-type tissues and represent
good models of normal epithelial cells in vivo. Since cancer
progression depends on a stepwise accumulation of mutations,
it is equally important to determine the effect of risk
factors and preventive agents on cells already bearing such
mutations. Such cells may respond to various agents in a
different manner relative to wild-type cells.
To address this issue, Dr. Telang and his colleague Dr.
Meena Katdare, in collaboration with Dr. Levy Kopelovich
at the National Cancer Institute, have developed colon epithelial
cell cultures from mice bearing mutations in the APC tumor
suppressor gene, typically the first gene to undergo mutation
in early premalignant polyps. These cells display altered
growth properties in culture, validating the idea that they
represent a qualitatively distinct target population.3 Telang
and Katdare and have also found that chemopreventive agents
such as sulindac and 9-cis-retinoic acid inhibited some
of the abnormal growth properties of the mutant cells.4
Importantly, culture systems of this sort may provide a
powerful means of screening for compounds that are inhibitory
to colonic cells carrying specific mutations, but may have
little effect on normal epithelium.
Editors
note:
Meena Katdare, PhD, is Senior Research Associate at The
Murray Rayburn Biochemical Endocrinology Research Laboratory,
Strang Cancer Prevention Center.
Martin Lipkin, MD, is Professor of Medicine at Weill Medical
College of Cornell University and Director of Clinical Research,
Head, Clinical Chemoprevention Laboratory, Strang Cancer
Prevention Center.
Nitin Telang, PhD, is Associate Research Professor, Department
of Surgery at the Weill Medical College of Cornell University
and Head, Carcinogenesis and Prevention Laboratory, Strang
Cancer Prevention Center.
1.
Risio M, Lipkin M, Newmark H, et al. Apoptosis, cell replication,
and Western-style diet-induced tumorigenesis in mouse colon.
Cancer Res. 1996;56:4910-4916.
2. Newmark HL, Yang K, Lipkin M, Kopelovich L, et al. Western-style
diet induces benign and malignant neoplasms in the colon
of normal C57Bl/6 mice. Carcinogenesis. 2001;22:1871-1875.
3. Katdare M, Kopelovich L, Telang N. Chemopreventive agents
inhibit aberrant proliferation of the aneuploid phenotype
in a colon epithelial cell line established from an Apc1638[+/-]
mouse. Ann NY Acad Sci. 2001;952:169-174.
4. Katdare M, Kopelovich L, Telang N. Preventive efficacy
of 9-cis-retinoic acid on mutant colon epithelial cell lines
established from Apc+/- 1638N and Mlh+/- /1638N+/- gene
knockout mice. Proc Amer Assoc Cancer Res. 2002;43:124.
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