Gastric adenocarcinoma cells secrete sulfomucins, but their role in gastric tumorigenesis remains unclear. To address that question, we generated / double-knockout (DKO) mice by crossing knockout (KO) mice, which spontaneously develop gastric adenocarcinoma, with KO mice, which are deficient in the sulfotransferase GlcNAc6ST-2. / DKO mice lack gastric sulfomucins but developed gastric adenocarcinoma. Unexpectedly, severe gastric erosion occurred in / DKO mice at as early as 3 weeks of age, and with aging these lesions were accompanied by gastritis cystica profunda (GCP). , and transcripts in gastric mucosa of 5-week-old / DKO mice exhibiting both hyperplasia and severe erosion were significantly upregulated relative to age-matched KO mice, which showed hyperplasia alone. However, upregulation of these genes disappeared in 50-week-old / DKO mice exhibiting high-grade dysplasia/adenocarcinoma and GCP. Moreover, and were downregulated in / DKO mice relative to age-matched KO mice exhibiting adenocarcinoma alone. These combined results indicate that the presence of sulfomucins prevents severe gastric erosion followed by GCP in KO mice by transiently regulating a set of inflammation-related genes, , and at 5 weeks of age, although sulfomucins were not directly associated with gastric cancer development.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6764063 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1369/0022155419860134 | DOI Listing |
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