Jci_page_head_homepage_01 Jci_page_head_homepage_02
Marie Anson, Anne-Marie Crain-Denoyelle, Véronique Baud, Fanny Chereau, Angélique Gougelet, Benoit Terris, Satoshi Yamagoe, Sabine Colnot, Mireille Viguier, Christine Perret, Jean-Pierre Couty
Published in Volume 122, Issue 2
J Clin Invest. 2012; 122(2):586–599 doi:10.1172/JCI43937
Abstract | Full text | PDF | Supplemental material
Options: View larger image (or click on image)
Jci43937
Figure 9
Liver inflammation is critical for β-catenin–induced liver tumorigenesis.

Oncogenic activation of β-catenin in hepatocytes triggers an intrinsic inflammatory program with both pro- and antiinflammatory mediators that together construct an inflammatory microenvironment that controls tumor progression. In Apc-deficient (Apc–/–) hepatocytes, β-catenin signaling is constitutively activated and induced: (a) the expression of a proinflammatory program resulting from both a direct control by the Wnt/β-catenin signaling and an indirect control by NF-κB that is not yet understood and (b) the expression of an antiinflammatory program including at least the direct LECT2 target gene. 2 interconnected factors relay the antiinflammatory response, the chemokine-like factor LECT2 and the iNKT cells. iNKT cell homeostasis is controlled by LECT2 at the level of liver homing and cytokine polarization. Together, the β-catenin–induced liver microenvironment exhibits a low grade of chronic inflammation that preserves an immune response with antitumor activity. In mice deficient in Apc and LECT2 (Apc–/–LECT2–/–), the lack of LECT2 causes high-grade inflammation in the liver microenvironment, which strongly potentiates the tumoral process and results in lung metastases (see Results).