TY - JOUR
T1 - GNAI1 and GNAI3 Reduce Colitis-Associated Tumorigenesis in Mice by Blocking IL6 Signaling and Down-regulating Expression of GNAI2
AU - Li, Zhi Wei
AU - Sun, Beicheng
AU - Gong, Ting
AU - Guo, Sheng
AU - Zhang, Jianhua
AU - Wang, Junlong
AU - Sugawara, Atsushi
AU - Jiang, Meisheng
AU - Yan, Junjun
AU - Gurary, Alexandra
AU - Zheng, Xin
AU - Gao, Bifeng
AU - Xiao, Shu Yuan
AU - Chen, Wenlian
AU - Ma, Chi
AU - Farrar, Christine
AU - Zhu, Chenjun
AU - Chan, Owen T.M.
AU - Xin, Can
AU - Winnicki, Andrew
AU - Winnicki, John
AU - Tang, Mingxin
AU - Park, Ryan
AU - Winnicki, Mary
AU - Diener, Katrina
AU - Wang, Zhanwei
AU - Liu, Qicai
AU - Chu, Catherine H.
AU - Arter, Zhaohui L.
AU - Yue, Peibin
AU - Alpert, Lindsay
AU - Hui, George S.
AU - Fei, Peiwen
AU - Turkson, James
AU - Yang, Wentian
AU - Wu, Guangyu
AU - Tao, Ailin
AU - Ramos, Joe W.
AU - Moisyadi, Stefan
AU - Holcombe, Randall F.
AU - Jia, Wei
AU - Birnbaumer, Lutz
AU - Zhou, Xiqiao
AU - Chu, Wen Ming
N1 - Funding Information:
Funding This study was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (NNSFC) 81100274 & 81570522 (to Xiqiao Zhou), the State Key Programs of the NNSFC 81430062 (to Beicheng Sun), the Key project of National Science and Technology of China 2016ZX08011005 (to Ailin Tao), Z01-ES-101643 of the Intramural Research Program of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) (to Lutz Birnbaumer), P30GM114737 (to Molecular and Cellular Immunology Core), P30CA071789-16 (to Microscopy, Imaging, and Flow Cytometry Shared Resource), 2P20GM103457 (to W. Steven Ward), P30CA071789 (to Randall F. Holcombe), NIH R01 GM118915 to Guangyu Wu, NIH U01CA188387-01 (to Wei Jia and Wen-Ming Chu), the Hawaii Community Foundation, the University of Hawaii (UH) Foundation Pilot Award, UH Start-Up and Bridged Funds, and NIH R01 AI054128 (to Wen-Ming Chu). Pathology slides were created at the Pathology Core of UH Cancer Center. Funding This study was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (NNSFC) 81100274 & 81570522 (to Xiqiao Zhou), the State Key Programs of the NNSFC 81430062 (to Beicheng Sun), the Key project of National Science and Technology of China 2016ZX08011005 (to Ailin Tao), Z01-ES-101643 of the Intramural Research Program of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) (to Lutz Birnbaumer), P30GM114737 (to Molecular and Cellular Immunology Core), P30CA071789-16 (to Microscopy, Imaging, and Flow Cytometry Shared Resource), 2P20GM103457 (to W. Steven Ward), P30CA071789 (to Randall F. Holcombe), NIH R01 GM118915 to Guangyu Wu, NIH U01CA188387-01 (to Wei Jia and Wen-Ming Chu), the Hawaii Community Foundation, the University of Hawaii (UH) Foundation Pilot Award, UH Start-Up and Bridged Funds, and NIH R01 AI054128 (to Wen-Ming Chu). Pathology slides were created at the Pathology Core of UH Cancer Center. We thank Drs Michele Carbone, Junfang Ji, Charles Rosser, and Haining Yang for critically reading the manuscript, Hugh Luck for expert help with H&E and IHC, and Drs Jeremie Oliver and Jun Zhang for technical support. We are grateful to the Chu-Yao family for their financial support. Wen-Ming Chu was a scholar of the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society. Author contributions: Wen-Ming Chu conceived and directed the project and performed a large body of experiments. Lindsay Alpert, Zhaohui Liao Alter, Catherine H. Chu, Owen T.M. Chan, Wenlian Chen, Wen-Ming Chu, Katrina Diener, Christine Farrar, Bifeng Gao, Alexandra Gurary, Sheng Guo, Ting Gong, Meisheng Jiang, Qicai Liu, Zhi-Wei Li, Chi Ma, Ryan Park, Atsushi Sugawara, Beicheng Sun, Mingxin Tang, Can Xin, Shu-Yuan Xiao, Andrew Winnicki, John Winnicki, Mary Winnicki, Zhanwei Wang, Junjun Yan, Peibin Yue, Chenjun Zhu, Xin Zheng, and Xiqiao Zhou performed experiments. Owen T.M. Chan, Wenlian Chen, Wen-Ming Chu, Christine Farrar, Alexandra Gurary, Sheng Guo, Ting Gong, Meisheng Jiang, Zhi-Wei Li, John Winnicki, Junjun Yan, Xin Zheng, and Xiqiao Zhou analyzed data. Lutz Birnbaumer and Meisheng Jiang provided GNAI1KO, GNAI2KO, GNAI2
Funding Information:
We thank Drs Michele Carbone, Junfang Ji, Charles Rosser, and Haining Yang for critically reading the manuscript, Hugh Luck for expert help with H&E and IHC, and Drs Jeremie Oliver and Jun Zhang for technical support. We are grateful to the Chu-Yao family for their financial support. Wen-Ming Chu was a scholar of the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 AGA Institute
PY - 2019/6
Y1 - 2019/6
N2 - Background & Aims: Interleukin 6 (IL6) and tumor necrosis factor contribute to the development of colitis-associated cancer (CAC). We investigated these signaling pathways and the involvement of G protein subunit alpha i1 (GNAI1), GNAI2, and GNAI3 in the development of CAC in mice and humans. Methods: B6;129 wild-type (control) or mice with disruption of Gnai1, Gnai2, and/or Gnai3 or conditional disruption of Gnai2 in CD11c+ or epithelial cells were given dextran sulfate sodium (DSS) to induce colitis followed by azoxymethane (AOM) to induce carcinogenesis; some mice were given an antibody against IL6. Feces were collected from mice, and the compositions of microbiomes were analyzed by polymerase chain reactions. Dendritic cells (DCs) and myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs) isolated from spleen and colon tissues were analyzed by flow cytometry. We performed immunoprecipitation and immunoblot analyses of colon tumor tissues, MDSCs, and mouse embryonic fibroblasts to study the expression levels of GNAI1, GNAI2, and GNAI3 and the interactions of GNAI1 and GNAI3 with proteins in the IL6 signaling pathway. We analyzed the expression of Gnai2 messenger RNA by CD11c+ cells in the colonic lamina propria by PrimeFlow, expression of IL6 in DCs by flow cytometry, and secretion of cytokines in sera and colon tissues by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. We obtained colon tumor and matched nontumor tissues from 83 patients with colorectal cancer having surgery in China and 35 patients with CAC in the United States. Mouse and human colon tissues were analyzed by histology, immunoblot, immunohistochemistry, and/or RNA-sequencing analyses. Results: GNAI1 and GNAI3 (GNAI1;3) double-knockout (DKO) mice developed more severe colitis after administration of DSS and significantly more colonic tumors than control mice after administration of AOM plus DSS. Development of increased tumors in DKO mice was not associated with changes in fecal microbiomes but was associated with activation of nuclear factor (NF) κB and signal transducer and activator of transcription (STAT) 3; increased levels of GNAI2, nitric oxide synthase 2, and IL6; increased numbers of CD4+ DCs and MDSCs; and decreased numbers of CD8+ DCs. IL6 was mainly produced by CD4+/CD11b+, but not CD8+, DCs in DKO mice. Injection of DKO mice with a blocking antibody against IL6 reduced the expansion of MDSCs and the number of tumors that developed after CAC induction. Incubation of MDSCs or mouse embryonic fibroblasts with IL6 induced activation of either NF-κB by a JAK2-TRAF6-TAK1-CHUK/IKKB signaling pathway or STAT3 by JAK2. This activation resulted in expression of GNAI2, IL6 signal transducer (IL6ST, also called GP130) and nitric oxide synthase 2, and expansion of MDSCs; the expression levels of these proteins and expansion of MDSCs were further increased by the absence of GNAI1;3 in cells and mice. Conditional disruption of Gnai2 in CD11c+ cells of DKO mice prevented activation of NF-κB and STAT3 and changes in numbers of DCs and MDSCs. Colon tumor tissues from patients with CAC had reduced levels of GNAI1 and GNAI3 and increased levels of GNAI2 compared with normal tissues. Further analysis of a public human colorectal tumor DNA microarray database (GSE39582) showed that low Gani1 and Gnai3 messenger RNA expression and high Gnai2 messenger RNA expression were significantly associated with decreased relapse-free survival. Conclusions: GNAI1;3 suppresses DSS-plus-AOM–induced colon tumor development in mice, whereas expression of GNAI2 in CD11c+ cells and IL6 in CD4+/CD11b+ DCs appears to promote these effects. Strategies to induce GNAI1;3, or block GNAI2 and IL6, might be developed for the prevention or therapy of CAC in patients.
AB - Background & Aims: Interleukin 6 (IL6) and tumor necrosis factor contribute to the development of colitis-associated cancer (CAC). We investigated these signaling pathways and the involvement of G protein subunit alpha i1 (GNAI1), GNAI2, and GNAI3 in the development of CAC in mice and humans. Methods: B6;129 wild-type (control) or mice with disruption of Gnai1, Gnai2, and/or Gnai3 or conditional disruption of Gnai2 in CD11c+ or epithelial cells were given dextran sulfate sodium (DSS) to induce colitis followed by azoxymethane (AOM) to induce carcinogenesis; some mice were given an antibody against IL6. Feces were collected from mice, and the compositions of microbiomes were analyzed by polymerase chain reactions. Dendritic cells (DCs) and myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs) isolated from spleen and colon tissues were analyzed by flow cytometry. We performed immunoprecipitation and immunoblot analyses of colon tumor tissues, MDSCs, and mouse embryonic fibroblasts to study the expression levels of GNAI1, GNAI2, and GNAI3 and the interactions of GNAI1 and GNAI3 with proteins in the IL6 signaling pathway. We analyzed the expression of Gnai2 messenger RNA by CD11c+ cells in the colonic lamina propria by PrimeFlow, expression of IL6 in DCs by flow cytometry, and secretion of cytokines in sera and colon tissues by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. We obtained colon tumor and matched nontumor tissues from 83 patients with colorectal cancer having surgery in China and 35 patients with CAC in the United States. Mouse and human colon tissues were analyzed by histology, immunoblot, immunohistochemistry, and/or RNA-sequencing analyses. Results: GNAI1 and GNAI3 (GNAI1;3) double-knockout (DKO) mice developed more severe colitis after administration of DSS and significantly more colonic tumors than control mice after administration of AOM plus DSS. Development of increased tumors in DKO mice was not associated with changes in fecal microbiomes but was associated with activation of nuclear factor (NF) κB and signal transducer and activator of transcription (STAT) 3; increased levels of GNAI2, nitric oxide synthase 2, and IL6; increased numbers of CD4+ DCs and MDSCs; and decreased numbers of CD8+ DCs. IL6 was mainly produced by CD4+/CD11b+, but not CD8+, DCs in DKO mice. Injection of DKO mice with a blocking antibody against IL6 reduced the expansion of MDSCs and the number of tumors that developed after CAC induction. Incubation of MDSCs or mouse embryonic fibroblasts with IL6 induced activation of either NF-κB by a JAK2-TRAF6-TAK1-CHUK/IKKB signaling pathway or STAT3 by JAK2. This activation resulted in expression of GNAI2, IL6 signal transducer (IL6ST, also called GP130) and nitric oxide synthase 2, and expansion of MDSCs; the expression levels of these proteins and expansion of MDSCs were further increased by the absence of GNAI1;3 in cells and mice. Conditional disruption of Gnai2 in CD11c+ cells of DKO mice prevented activation of NF-κB and STAT3 and changes in numbers of DCs and MDSCs. Colon tumor tissues from patients with CAC had reduced levels of GNAI1 and GNAI3 and increased levels of GNAI2 compared with normal tissues. Further analysis of a public human colorectal tumor DNA microarray database (GSE39582) showed that low Gani1 and Gnai3 messenger RNA expression and high Gnai2 messenger RNA expression were significantly associated with decreased relapse-free survival. Conclusions: GNAI1;3 suppresses DSS-plus-AOM–induced colon tumor development in mice, whereas expression of GNAI2 in CD11c+ cells and IL6 in CD4+/CD11b+ DCs appears to promote these effects. Strategies to induce GNAI1;3, or block GNAI2 and IL6, might be developed for the prevention or therapy of CAC in patients.
KW - CAC
KW - IBD
KW - Mouse Model
KW - Transcription Factor
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U2 - 10.1053/j.gastro.2019.02.040
DO - 10.1053/j.gastro.2019.02.040
M3 - Article
C2 - 30836096
AN - SCOPUS:85065800355
SN - 0016-5085
VL - 156
SP - 2297
EP - 2312
JO - Gastroenterology
JF - Gastroenterology
IS - 8
ER -