Chronic inflammation has long been appreciated to play a critical role in tumor development and maintenance. Among the mechanisms involved in coordinating the initiation and resolution of inflammation are those responsible for modifying mRNA stability and/or translation. Several studies have linked the RNA-binding protein HuR, which increases mRNA stability, with malignant transformation. However, in this issue of the JCI, Yiakouvaki et al. compellingly demonstrate in mice that increased HuR activity in myeloid cells has a protective role in the onset of pathologic intestinal inflammation (i.e., colitis) and colitis-associated cancer (CAC). These observations highlight the need to understand the roles of HuR in distinct cell populations in vivo and suggest that enhancing HuR activity may be of clinical benefit in protecting against pathologic inflammation and cancer.
Jacqueline C. Shultz, Charles E. Chalfant
Title and authors | Publication | Year |
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Exome sequencing of a colorectal cancer family reveals shared mutation pattern and predisposition circuitry along tumor pathways
SH Suleiman, ME Koko, WH Nasir, O Elfateh, UK Elgizouli, MO Abdallah, KO Alfarouk, A Hussain, S Faisal, FM Ibrahim, M Romano, A Sultan, L Banks, M Newport, F Baralle, AM Elhassan, HS Mohamed, ME Ibrahim |
Frontiers in Genetics | 2015 |
Trichostatin-A modulates claudin-1 mRNA stability through the modulation of Hu antigen R and tristetraprolin in colon cancer cells
A Sharma, AA Bhat, M Krishnan, AB Singh, P Dhawan |
Carcinogenesis | 2013 |
miR-29 Acts as a Decoy in Sarcomas to Protect the Tumor Suppressor A20 mRNA from Degradation by HuR
MY Balkhi, OH Iwenofu, N Bakkar, KJ Ladner, DS Chandler, PJ Houghton, CA London, W Kraybill, D Perrotti, CM Croce, C Keller, DC Guttridge |
Science signaling | 2013 |