A recent study by researchers at the Max Delbrück Center and Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin has revealed new insights into the p53 tumor suppressor gene’s role in ulcerative colitis (UC), a chronic inflammatory bowel disease that raises the risk of developing colon cancer. Published in Science Advances, this study identifies a potential drug target that could help prevent UC from advancing to malignancy, an important finding for understanding how to manage disease progression.
Ulcerative colitis affects an estimated five million people worldwide, causing chronic inflammation in the large intestine and specifically impacting “crypts”—tube-like structures in the colon’s epithelial lining that house stem cells. These stem cells are critical for maintaining healthy tissue and normal colon function.
When the colon is injured, epithelial crypt cells typically switch into a “repair mode,” proliferating to heal the tissue. In UC patients, however, these cells can remain stuck in this proliferative repair mode, leading to what scientists call a “regenerative cell state.” This dysfunctional repair mechanism leaves the colon with fewer mature cells, which disrupts normal tissue function and promotes a toxic feedback loop where stem cell proliferation intensifies.
In this study, researchers found that this defective repair mechanism in UC patients is linked to a dysfunctional or missing p53 gene, which normally regulates the cell cycle and repairs DNA. According to the researchers, without a functional p53, cells are unable to exit the repair mode, leading to the persistence of immature cells in the colon.
The findings suggest that by targeting p53-related pathways, it may be possible to intervene early in UC patients who are at high risk of developing cancer. Professor Michael Sigal, the study’s senior author, explains that for these high-risk patients, it may be possible to “target aberrant cells and get rid of them early, before any cancer occurs.” The identification of p53’s role in UC pathology provides a promising target for future therapies aimed at preventing UC from progressing to colon cancer.
Understanding the molecular mechanisms that drive UC progression is crucial for developing new approaches to prevent UC-related cancer. By pinpointing the role of p53 in keeping cells in a regenerative state, this study offers a path for therapeutic intervention that could improve long-term outcomes for UC patients by addressing one of the underlying causes of cancer risk.