4.7 Article

Elevated expression of tumor necrosis factor-α signaling molecules in colonic tumors of Zucker obese (fa/fa) rats

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CANCER
Volume 127, Issue 9, Pages 2042-2050

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ijc.25232

Keywords

colon cancer; obesity; TNF-alpha; NF-kappa B; Zucker obese rats

Categories

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council, Canada
  2. Cancer Research Society, Canada

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Zucker obese rats are highly sensitive to colon cancer and possess a plethora of metabolic abnormalities including elevated levels of cytokine tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha). The main objective of this study was to determine if physiologically elevated TNF-alpha affects colonic tumor phenotype with regard to an altered TNF-alpha signaling pathway. Zucker obese (fa/fa, homozygous recessive for dysfunctional leptin receptors), Zucker lean (Fa/fa, Fa/Fa) and Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats were injected twice with azoxymethane (10 mg/kg) over 2 weeks. After 30 weeks, the animals were terminated and physiological and tumor parameters were assessed. Obese rats had notably higher body and organ weights as well as plasma TNF-alpha, insulin and leptin levels than lean or SD animals. A 100% tumor incidence and significantly higher tumor size, multiplicity and burden were found in obese rats compared to the lean group that had 47.8% tumor incidence. The SD group had the lowest tumor incidence (20.0%). Tumors from obese animals had higher protein levels of TNF-alpha, TNF-alpha-receptor-2 (TNFR2), nuclear transcription factor-kappa B (NF-kappa B) and I kappa B-kinase beta (IKK beta) compared to lean animals. In both obese and lean groups, expression levels of these proteins were higher in tumors than in surrounding, normal-appearing colonic mucosae. These findings support an important role for TNF-alpha signaling in tumorigenesis and demonstrate that tumors growing in an obese state had significantly different expression levels of TNFR2 and NF-kappa B, proteins known to play a critical role in growth and survival, than those growing in the lean state. It is concluded that the physiological state of the host intricately affects tumor phenotype.

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