A54 SHP2 FUNCTION IN NORMAL AND APC-MUTANT INTESTINAL EPITHELIAL CELLS
A Côté-Biron, J Gagné-Sansfaçon, N Rivard

TL;DR
This study explores how SHP2, a protein involved in cell signaling, promotes intestinal tumor growth and how blocking it could prevent colorectal cancer.
Contribution
The study reveals SHP2's role in normal and APC-mutant intestinal cells and identifies its inhibition as a potential therapeutic strategy.
Findings
SHP2 inhibition in normal intestinal cells induces senescence-like features and reduces proliferation.
Blocking SHP2 in APC-mutant cells leads to cell death and increased stem cell marker expression.
SHP2 inhibition downregulates Ras and PI3K signaling genes in normal and cancerous intestinal models.
Abstract
Somatic SHP2 gain-of-function mutations were found in some colorectal tumours. However, its function in colorectal epithelium remains to be determined. SHP2 is a tyrosine phosphatase necessary for RAS/MAPK pathway activation by most, if not all, tyrosine kinase receptors, as well as by GPCRs and cytokine receptors. SHP2 can also regulate the PI3K, Jak/Stat, RhoA and Hippo pathways in different cell settings. As a result, SHP2 can control cellular processes including growth, migration and differentiation. Previously, we observed that SHP2 levels are enhanced in human colorectal tumours, notably in late adenomas. Likewise, SHP2 silencing inhibited ERK activation and tumour properties of established human CRC cell lines. Hence, these findings support a model in which SHP2 activation promotes tumorigenesis in the intestinal epithelium. But how? To analyze the exact cellular and molecular…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
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Taxonomy
TopicsHelicobacter pylori-related gastroenterology studies · Monoclonal and Polyclonal Antibodies Research · Immunodeficiency and Autoimmune Disorders
