The only reason I’m posting this article is the word “Villin” in the title of the article (Gastroenterology 2012; 142: 531-42); I wondered what this was. In this study, the authors show that “disruption of KLF4 in villin-positive gastric progenitor cells promotes the formation and progression of tumors in the antrum of mice.” For the uninitiated, an editorial on pages 424-27 of the same issue explains the entire article and the significance of the findings.
Kruppel-like factor 4 (KLF4) is a protein in multiple tissues that is important in cell differentiation, inflammation, and carcinogenesis. Villin is an actin-bundling protein found in the apical brush border of absorptive tissue. Villin-expressing gastric progenitor cells are typically quiescent but undergo division during inflammatory insults.
This is important in understanding gastric cancer because for a long time it was unclear why cancer would develop in the stomach where there is frequent turnover of the mucosa. It is likely that more quiescent cells live long enough to accumulate cancer-promoting mutations/changes. This study adds support to this hypothesis, at least in mice.