Runx3 in immunity, inflammation and cancer

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Abstract

In this chapter we summarize the pros and cons of the notion that Runx3 is a major tumor suppressor gene (TSG). Inactivation of TSGs in normal cells provides a viability/growth advantage that contributes cell-autonomously to cancer. More than a decade ago it was suggested that RUNX3 is involved in gastric cancer development, a postulate extended later to other epithelial cancers portraying RUNX3 as a major TSG. However, evidence that Runx3 is not expressed in normal gastric and other epithelia has challenged the RUNX3-TSG paradigm. In contrast, RUNX3 is overexpressed in a significant fraction of tumor cells in various human epithelial cancers and its overexpression in pancreatic cancer cells promotes their migration, anchorage- independent growth and metastatic potential. Moreover, recent highthroughput quantitative genome-wide studies on thousands of human samples of various tumors and new investigations of the role of Runx3 in mouse cancer models have unequivocally demonstrated that RUNX3 is not a bona fide cell-autonomous TSG. Importantly, accumulating data demonstrated that RUNX3 functions in control of immunity and inflammation, thereby indirectly influencing epithelial tumor development.

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Lotem, J., Levanon, D., Negreanu, V., Bauer, O., Hantisteanu, S., Dicken, J., & Groner, Y. (2017). Runx3 in immunity, inflammation and cancer. In Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology (Vol. 962, pp. 369–393). Springer New York LLC. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-10-3233-2_23

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