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STAT3 activation in skeletal muscle links muscle wasting and the acute phase response in cancer cachexia. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Cachexia in cancer patients leads to weight loss and reduced quality of life, with strong links to high serum levels of Interleukin-6 (IL-6) and acute phase proteins like fibrinogen and serum amyloid A (SAA).
  • Research in mice with different severity levels of Colon-26 carcinoma showed that both moderate and severe cachexia were characterized by elevated IL-6, activated STAT3 pathways, and specific muscle gene expression changes, pointing to inflammation as a key factor.
  • The findings suggest that the STAT3 pathway plays a crucial role in muscle wasting by promoting the production of acute phase proteins in response to IL-6, which connects high IL-6 levels to muscle loss in cancer patients.

Article Abstract

Background: Cachexia, or weight loss despite adequate nutrition, significantly impairs quality of life and response to therapy in cancer patients. In cancer patients, skeletal muscle wasting, weight loss and mortality are all positively associated with increased serum cytokines, particularly Interleukin-6 (IL-6), and the presence of the acute phase response. Acute phase proteins, including fibrinogen and serum amyloid A (SAA) are synthesized by hepatocytes in response to IL-6 as part of the innate immune response. To gain insight into the relationships among these observations, we studied mice with moderate and severe Colon-26 (C26)-carcinoma cachexia.

Methodology/principal Findings: Moderate and severe C26 cachexia was associated with high serum IL-6 and IL-6 family cytokines and highly similar patterns of skeletal muscle gene expression. The top canonical pathways up-regulated in both were the complement/coagulation cascade, proteasome, MAPK signaling, and the IL-6 and STAT3 pathways. Cachexia was associated with increased muscle pY705-STAT3 and increased STAT3 localization in myonuclei. STAT3 target genes, including SOCS3 mRNA and acute phase response proteins, were highly induced in cachectic muscle. IL-6 treatment and STAT3 activation both also induced fibrinogen in cultured C2C12 myotubes. Quantitation of muscle versus liver fibrinogen and SAA protein levels indicates that muscle contributes a large fraction of serum acute phase proteins in cancer.

Conclusions/significance: These results suggest that the STAT3 transcriptome is a major mechanism for wasting in cancer. Through IL-6/STAT3 activation, skeletal muscle is induced to synthesize acute phase proteins, thus establishing a molecular link between the observations of high IL-6, increased acute phase response proteins and muscle wasting in cancer. These results suggest a mechanism by which STAT3 might causally influence muscle wasting by altering the profile of genes expressed and translated in muscle such that amino acids liberated by increased proteolysis in cachexia are synthesized into acute phase proteins and exported into the blood.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3140523PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0022538PLOS

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