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Cholangiocarcinoma, gone without the Wnt? | LitMetric

Cholangiocarcinoma, gone without the Wnt?

World J Hepatol

Anne TR Noll, Steven WM Olde Damink, Frank G Schaap, Department of Surgery, NUTRIM School of Nutrition and Translational Research in Metabolism, Maastricht University, 6200 MD Maastricht, The Netherlands.

Published: September 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • Cholangiocarcinoma (CCA) is a rare type of cancer affecting the bile ducts, often diagnosed at advanced stages, leading to a poor prognosis due to limited treatment options and frequent recurrence.
  • Recent research has identified the Wnt signaling pathway as a key player in the growth of CCA, with elevated levels of Wnt ligands like Wnt7B and Wnt10A found in tumor tissues.
  • Experimental models reveal that targeting the Wnt pathway can reduce tumor growth and size, suggesting that inhibiting this signaling could be a potential therapeutic strategy for managing CCA.

Article Abstract

Cholangiocarcinoma (CCA) is a relatively rare malignancy of the intra- or extra-hepatic bile ducts that is classified according to its anatomical localization as intrahepatic, perihilar or distal. Overall, CCA has a dismal prognosis due to typical presentation at an advanced irresectable stage, lack of effective non-surgical treatments, and a high rate of disease recurrence. CCA frequently arises on a background of chronic liver inflammation and cholestasis. Chronic inflammation is accompanied by enhanced cell turnover with generation of additional inflammatory stimuli, and a microenvironment rich in pro-inflammatory mediators and proliferative factors that enable accumulation of mutations, transformation and expansion of mutated cells. A recent study by Boulter et al implicates the Wnt signaling cascade in cholangiocarcinogenesis. Wnt ligands Wnt7B and Wnt10A were found to be highly overexpressed in human CCA tissue. Wnt7B protein was present throughout the tumor stroma, and often co-localized with a subset of CD68(+) macrophages. To address in a direct manner whether Wnt signaling is engaged in development of CCA, Boulter et al explored the Wnt signaling pathway in an experimental model that recapitulates the multi-stage progression of human CCA. Wnt ligands found to be elevated in human CCA were also upregulated during the course of CCA development following thioacetamide treatment. Wnt10a increased during the (pre-cancerous) regenerative phase, while Wnt7b induction paralleled tumor growth. Along with upregulation of target genes, the findings demonstrate that the canonical Wnt pathway is progressively activated during cholangio-carcinogenesis. Macrophage depletion, eliminating a major source of Wnt7b, prevented activation of the canonical Wnt cascade, and resulted in reduced number and volume of tumors in this model. Moreover, specific inhibitors of the canonical Wnt pathway (ICG-001 and C-59) caused reduction of tumor area and number, in xenograft and thioacetamide models of CCA. The aggregated findings show that experimental, and presumably human CCA, is a Wnt-driven tumor. Modulation of Wnt signaling, alone or in combination with surgical or chemotherapy approaches, holds promise in the management of this fatal malignancy.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5026991PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.4254/wjh.v8.i26.1093DOI Listing

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