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  4. Epithelial Pten is dispensable for intestinal homeostasis but suppresses adenoma development and progression after Apc mutation
 
research article

Epithelial Pten is dispensable for intestinal homeostasis but suppresses adenoma development and progression after Apc mutation

Marsh, Victoria
•
Winton, Douglas J.
•
Williams, Geraint T.
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2008
Nature Genetics

PTEN acts as a tumor suppressor in a range of tissue types and has been implicated in the regulation of intestinal stem cells. To study Pten function in the intestine, we used various conditional transgenic strategies to specifically delete Pten from the mouse intestinal epithelium. We show that Pten loss specifically within the adult or embryonic epithelial cell population does not affect the normal architecture or homeostasis of the epithelium. However, loss of Pten in the context of Apc deficiency accelerates tumorigenesis through increased activation of Akt, leading to rapid development of adenocarcinoma. We conclude that Pten is redundant in otherwise normal intestinal epithelium and epithelial stem cells but, in the context of activated Wnt signaling, suppresses progression to adenocarcinoma through modulation of activated Akt levels.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1038/ng.256
Web of Science ID

WOS:000261215900020

Author(s)
Marsh, Victoria
Winton, Douglas J.
Williams, Geraint T.
Dubois, Nicole
Trumpp, Andreas  
Sansom, Owen J.
Clarke, Alan R.
Date Issued

2008

Published in
Nature Genetics
Volume

40

Start page

1436

End page

1444

Subjects

Gene-Expression

•

Beta-Catenin

•

Deficiency

•

Cancer

•

Polyposis

•

Deletion

•

Mouse

•

Leads

•

Mice

•

Cre

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
UPTRU  
Available on Infoscience
November 30, 2010
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/60820
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