Colon cancer: genomics and apoptotic events.

Biol Chem

School of Molecular and Cell Biology, University of the Witwatersrand, Private Bag 3, Johannesburg 2050, South Africa.

Published: June 2004

AI Article Synopsis

  • Colon cancer ranks as the third most prevalent cancer worldwide, primarily influenced by genetic factors, age, and diet.
  • Despite being highly treatable through surgery if detected early, advanced cases often result in death due to liver metastases.
  • The text discusses key oncogenes, genetic mutations, apoptosis-related molecules, and briefly reviews current cancer therapies targeting colon cancer.

Article Abstract

Colon cancer is the third most common cancer globally. The risk of developing colon cancer is influenced by a number of factors that include age and diet, but is primarily a genetic disease, resulting from oncogene over-expression and tumour suppressor gene inactivation. The induction and progression of the disease is briefly outlined, as are the cellular changes that occur in its progression. While colon cancer is uniformly amenable to surgery if detected at the early stages, advanced carcinomas are usually lethal, with metastases to the liver being the most common cause of death. Oncogenes and genetic mutations that occur in colon cancer are featured. The molecules and signals that act to eradicate or initiate the apoptosis cascade in cancer cells, are elucidated, and these include caspases, Fas, Bax, Bid, APC, antisense hTERT, PUMA, 15-LOX-1, ceramide, butyrate, tributyrin and PPARgamma, whereas the molecules which promote colon cancer cell survival are p53 mutants, Bcl-2, Neu3 and COX-2. Cancer therapies aimed at controlling colon cancer are reviewed briefly.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/BC.2004.053DOI Listing

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