4.7 Article

Homeostasis and Cancer Initiation: Organoids as Models to Study the Initiation of Gastric Cancer

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms23052790

Keywords

gastric cancer; organoid; gastric homeostasis; Helicobacter pylori infection

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Gastric cancer is a significant global disease burden and its etiology is not well understood. The development of organoid cultures has provided insights into gastric homeostasis. By utilizing this model, we can investigate the impact of host genetics and bacterial factors on gastric stem cell proliferation and DNA damage.
Gastric cancer represents a significant disease burden worldwide. The factors that initiate cancer are not well understood. Chronic inflammation such as that triggered by H. pylori infection is the most significant cause of gastric cancer. In recent years, organoid cultures developed from human and animal adult stem cells have facilitated great advances in our understanding of gastric homeostasis. Organoid models are now being exploited to investigate the role of host genetics and bacterial factors on proliferation and DNA damage in gastric stem cells. The impact of a chronic inflammatory state on gastric stem cells and the stroma has been less well addressed. This review discusses what we have learned from the use of organoid models to investigate cancer initiation, and highlights questions on the contribution of the microbiota, chronic inflammatory milieu, and stromal cells that can now be addressed by more complex coculture models.

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