Denervation suppresses gastric tumorigenesis

Chun‐Mei Zhao(Norwegian University of Science and Technology), Yoku Hayakawa(Columbia University), Yosuke Kodama(Norwegian University of Science and Technology), Sureshkumar Muthupalani(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), C. Benedikt Westphalen(LMU Klinikum), Gøran Andersen(Norwegian University of Science and Technology), Arnar Flatberg(Norwegian University of Science and Technology), Helene Johannessen(Norwegian University of Science and Technology), Richard A. Friedman(Columbia University), Bernhard W. Renz(Columbia University), Arne K. Sandvik(Norwegian University of Science and Technology), Vidar Beisvåg(Norwegian University of Science and Technology), Hiroyuki Tomita(Gifu University), Akira Hara(Gifu University), Michael Quante(TUM Klinikum), Zhishan Li(Columbia University), Michael D. Gershon(Columbia University), Kazuhiro Kaneko(National Cancer Center Hospital East), James G. Fox(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Timothy C. Wang(Columbia University), Duan Chen(Norwegian University of Science and Technology)
Science Translational Medicine
August 20, 2014
Cited by 636

Abstract

The nervous system plays an important role in the regulation of epithelial homeostasis and has also been postulated to play a role in tumorigenesis. We provide evidence that proper innervation is critical at all stages of gastric tumorigenesis. In three separate mouse models of gastric cancer, surgical or pharmacological denervation of the stomach (bilateral or unilateral truncal vagotomy, or local injection of botulinum toxin type A) markedly reduced tumor incidence and progression, but only in the denervated portion of the stomach. Vagotomy or botulinum toxin type A treatment also enhanced the therapeutic effects of systemic chemotherapy and prolonged survival. Denervation-induced suppression of tumorigenesis was associated with inhibition of Wnt signaling and suppression of stem cell expansion. In gastric organoid cultures, neurons stimulated growth in a Wnt-mediated fashion through cholinergic signaling. Furthermore, pharmacological inhibition or genetic knockout of the muscarinic acetylcholine M3 receptor suppressed gastric tumorigenesis. In gastric cancer patients, tumor stage correlated with neural density and activated Wnt signaling, whereas vagotomy reduced the risk of gastric cancer. Together, our findings suggest that vagal innervation contributes to gastric tumorigenesis via M3 receptor-mediated Wnt signaling in the stem cells, and that denervation might represent a feasible strategy for the control of gastric cancer.


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