Epithelial NF-κB activation promotes urethane-induced lung carcinogenesis

Georgios T. Stathopoulos(Pulmonary and Allergy Associates), Taylor P. Sherrill(Pulmonary and Allergy Associates), Dong‐Sheng Cheng(Pulmonary and Allergy Associates), Robert M. Scoggins(Pulmonary and Allergy Associates), Wei Han(Pulmonary and Allergy Associates), Vasiliy V. Polosukhin(Pulmonary and Allergy Associates), Linda Connelly(Vanderbilt University), Fiona E. Yull(Vanderbilt University), Barbara Fingleton(Vanderbilt University), Timothy S. Blackwell(Vanderbilt University)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
November 14, 2007
Cited by 188Open Access
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Abstract

Chronic inflammation is linked to carcinogenesis in several organ systems. In the lungs, NF-kappaB, a central effector of inflammatory responses, is frequently activated in non-small-cell lung cancer, but its role in tumor promotion has not been studied. Several lines of evidence indicate that ethyl carbamate (urethane)-induced lung tumor formation, a prototypical mouse model of multistage lung carcinogenesis, is potentiated by inflammation. We found that mouse strains susceptible to lung tumor formation (FVB, BALB/c) exhibited early NF-kappaB activation and inflammation in the lungs after urethane treatment. However, a resistant strain (C57B6) failed to activate NF-kappaB or induce lung inflammation. In FVB mice, we identified urethane-induced NF-kappaB activation in airway epithelium, as well as type II alveolar epithelial cells and macrophages. Using an inducible transgenic mouse model (FVB strain) to express a dominant inhibitor of NF-kappaB specifically in airway epithelial cells, we found that urethane-induced lung inflammation was blocked and tumor formation was reduced by >50%. Selective NF-kappaB inhibition resulted in increased apoptosis of airway epithelial cells at 2 weeks after urethane treatment in association with a marked reduction of Bcl-2 expression. These studies indicate that NF-kappaB signaling in airway epithelium is integral to tumorigenesis in the urethane model and identify the NF-kappaB pathway as a potential target for chemoprevention of lung cancer.


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