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First person – Danny Legge

机译:第一人称视角–丹尼·莱格(Danny Legge)

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First Person is a series of interviews with the first authors of a selection of papers published in Disease Models & Mechanisms (DMM), helping early-career researchers promote themselves alongside their papers. Danny Legge is first author on ‘ BCL-3 promotes a cancer stem cell phenotype by enhancing β-catenin signalling in colorectal tumour cells ’, published in DMM. Danny conducted the research described in this article while a PhD student in Professor Ann Williams's lab at Colorectal Tumour Biology Group, School of Cellular and Molecular Medicine, University of Bristol, UK. He is now a postdoc in the lab of Dr Keith Brown at Cancer Epigenetics Laboratory, School of Cellular and Molecular Medicine, University of Bristol, UK, investigating the role of cancer stem cells in colorectal cancer. Danny Legge How would you explain the main findings of your paper to non-scientific family and friends? Colorectal cancer (bowel cancer) is the second most common cause of cancer mortality in the UK. It is thought that cancer stem cells are responsible for the initiation of colorectal tumours and fuel the regeneration of tumours following the end of treatment. It is hypothesized that destruction of the cancer stem cells is required to prevent relapse of the cancer. Mutation of normal intestinal stem cells or reversion of specialized cells (de-differentiation) to a more stem-like state is suggested to be the origin of cancer stem cells, with both normal stem cells and cancer stem cells sharing molecular signatures. Many of the genes in these signatures are targets of the Wnt signalling pathway and almost all colorectal cancers undergo deregulated Wnt signalling. The β-catenin protein is the main effector of this pathway. Our study shows that BCL-3, a protein induced by inflammation, is a novel regulator of Wnt/β-catenin signalling and highlights the importance of this interaction for cancer stem cell function. Our results indicate that this protein could be targeted to reduce de-differentiation/plasticity of cancer cells and therefore target the cancer stem cell phenotype, providing more effective therapies for colorectal cancer patients in the future. What are the potential implications of these results for your field of research? Plasticity of cancer stem cells is recognized as a significant barrier to effective treatments. The ability of cells to de-differentiate, as promoted by the microenvironment, needs to be overcome to prevent tumour regeneration. Targeting LGR5-positive cancer stem cells alone has been shown to be ineffective, as surrounding tumour cells de-differentiate to re-express LGR5 and refuel tumour growth. Our data show that BCL-3 promotes expression of the intestinal stem cell markers LGR5 and ASCL2 in colorectal cancer cells. By targeting BCL-3, it may be possible to reduce this de-differentiation capacity, in addition to suppressing levels of aberrant Wnt signalling, given that BCL-3 functions downstream of mutated APC and β-catenin (the two most frequent driver mutations in colorectal tumours) to modulate Wnt signalling. What are the main advantages and drawbacks of the model system you have used as it relates to the disease you are investigating? Three-dimensional organoid and spheroid culture are valuable ex vivo tools that allow us to study colorectal cancer in more physiologically relevant conditions than 2D cell culture work alone. They provide a stepping stone between cell lines and in vivo mouse models. Future work will involve the use of mouse models to understand the role of BCL-3 in cancer stem cell fate in vivo. “Developing models that replicate the tumour microenvironment more closely will be key to unlocking the potential of targeting cancer stem cells in colorectal cancer.” What has surprised you the most while conducting your research? The BCL-3-mediated regulation of only a subset of Wnt targets involved in maintaining the intestinal stem cell phenotype is intriguing. Our work has shown that not all Wnt targets are regulated by BCL-3; in fact, many of the canonical proliferation-inducing targets usually associated with Wnt signalling are not regulated by modulating BCL-3 levels. Understanding how this is achieved may provide novel insights into the mechanisms of fine-tuning β-catenin/TCF-mediated transcription.
机译:《第一人称》是对一系列发表在《疾病模型与机制》(DMM)上的论文的第一作者的一系列采访,有助于早期职业研究人员与他们的论文一起发展自我。 Danny Legge是DMM上发表的“ BCL-3通过增强结直肠肿瘤细胞中β-catenin信号传导来促进癌症干细胞表型的第一作者”。 Danny在英国布里斯托大学细胞与分子医学学院结直肠肿瘤生物学小组的安·威廉姆斯教授实验室的博士研究生期间进行了本文所述的研究。他现在是英国布里斯托大学细胞与分子医学学院癌症表观遗传学实验室的Keith Brown博士实验室的博士后,研究癌症干细胞在结直肠癌中的作用。 Danny Legge您将如何向非科学的家人和朋友解释论文的主要发现?结肠直肠癌(大肠癌)是英国第二大最常见的癌症死亡原因。据认为,癌症干细胞负责结直肠肿瘤的引发,并在治疗结束后促进肿瘤的再生。假设需要破坏癌症干细胞以防止癌症复发。正常肠道干细胞突变或特化细胞回复(去分化)至更像干的状态被认为是癌症干细胞的起源,而正常干细胞和癌症干细胞均具有分子特征。这些特征中的许多基因都是Wnt信号通路的靶标,几乎所有大肠癌都经历了失调的Wnt信号传导。 β-catenin蛋白是该途径的主要效应物。我们的研究表明,BCL-3是一种由炎症诱导的蛋白,是Wnt /β-catenin信号传导的新型调节剂,突出了这种相互作用对癌症干细胞功能的重要性。我们的结果表明,该蛋白可以靶向减少癌细胞的去分化/可塑性,从而靶向癌干细胞表型,为将来的结直肠癌患者提供更有效的治疗方法。这些结果对您的研究领域有何潜在影响?癌症干细胞的可塑性被认为是有效治疗的重要障碍。如微环境所促进的,细胞去分化的能力需要克服,以防止肿瘤再生。已经证明仅靶向LGR5阳性的癌症干细胞是无效的,因为周围的肿瘤细胞会去分化以重新表达LGR5并加重肿瘤的生长。我们的数据表明BCL-3促进大肠癌细胞中肠道干细胞标记LGR5和ASCL2的表达。考虑到BCL-3在突变的APC和β-catenin的下游起作用(BCL-3的两个最常见的驱动子突变),通过靶向BCL-3,除抑制异常Wnt信号传导水平外,还可以降低这种去分化能力。结直肠肿瘤)来调节Wnt信号传导。您所使用的模型系统与要研究的疾病相关的主要优缺点是什么?三维类器官和球体培养是有价值的离体工具,与单独进行2D细胞培养工作相比,它使我们能够在更生理相关的条件下研究结直肠癌。它们在细胞系和体内小鼠模型之间提供了垫脚石。未来的工作将涉及使用小鼠模型来了解BCL-3在体内癌症干细胞命运中的作用。 “开发能够更紧密地复制肿瘤微环境的模型将是释放靶向大肠癌中癌症干细胞潜力的关键。”在进行研究时,给您最大的惊喜是什么?有趣的是,BCL-3介导的仅涉及参与维持肠道干细胞表型的Wnt靶标子集的调节。我们的工作表明,并非所有Wnt目标都受到BCL-3的监管;实际上,许多通常与Wnt信号传导有关的典型的诱导增殖的靶标不受BCL-3水平的调节。理解如何实现这一点可以为微调β-catenin/ TCF介导的转录机制提供新颖的见解。

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