Home > Journals > Medicine > Bulletin du cancer > summary
 
      Advanced search    Shopping cart    French version 
 
Latest books
Catalogue/Search
Collections
All journals
Medicine
Bulletin du Cancer
- Current issue
- Archives
- Subscribe
- Order an issue
- More information
Biology and research
Public health
Agronomy and biotech.
My account
Forgotten password?
Online account   activation
Subscribe
Licences IP
- Instructions for use
- Estimate request form
- Licence agreement
Order an issue
Pay-per-view articles
Newsletters
How can I publish?
Journals
Books
Help for advertisers
Foreign rights
Book sales agents



 

Texte intégral de l'article
 
Printable version

Dependence receptors: when apoptosis controls tumor progression


Bulletin du Cancer. Volume 94, Number 4, 10012-7, Avril 2007, Electronic Journal of Oncology

Free Article  

Author(s) : Agnès Bernet, Patrick Mehlen

Summary : A novel way of seeing cellular receptors has recently emerged. While a receptor used to be considered as inactive until bound by its ligand, it has been proposed that some receptors may also be active in the absence of their ligand. These so-called dependence receptors induce a specific death signal when the ligand is absent from the cell: Therefore, the expression of one of these receptors leads to the cell becoming dependent on the presence of the ligand for its survival. We have hypothesized that such a trait is a mechanism that allows inhibition of tumor growth, by inducing apoptosis “abnormal” cells that would usually grow in settings of ligand unavailability, i.e. local growth of tumor cells or growth beyond primary tumor site. Along this line, back in the early 90s, Vogelstein and colleagues suggested that a gene called DCC (for deleted in colorectal cancer) could be a tumor suppressor gene because it was found to be deleted in more than 70 % of colorectal cancers, as well as in many other cancers. During the last fifteen years, controversial data have failed to firmly establish whether DCC is indeed a tumor suppressor gene. However, our observation that DCC behaves as a dependence receptor that induces cell death unless its ligand netrin-1 is present, together with the fact that mice engineered to block DCC-induced cell death by overexpressing netrin-1 are predisposed to develop colorectal tumors, strengthen the role of dependence receptors as tumor suppressors. In this review, we will describe the implication of the netrin-1/receptor pairs as novel negative regulators of tumor development.

Keywords :

 

About us - Contact us - Conditions of use - Secure payment
Latest news - Conferences
Copyright © 2007 John Libbey Eurotext - All rights reserved
[ Legal information - Powered by Dolomède ]