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Disruption of the complex gastrointestinal ecosystem between the resident microflora and the colonic epithelial cells has been associated with increased inflammation and altered cell growth. Possible endpoints of this disturbance are IBD and CRC. The data presented in this thesis, entitled "PPARgamma as molecular target of epithelial functions in the gastrointestinal tract", shed further light on the underlying molecular mechanisms contributing to the well ordered homeostasis of this gastrointestinal ecosystem. Except for elucidating important roles for mesalazine and the dietary HDAC inhibitors butyrate and SFN in a) the modulation of cellular growth, b) the induction of APs, and c) the control of NFkappaB signalling in CRC cells, the involvement of the nuclear hormone receptors PPARgamma und VDR as "gatekeepers" in these intricate regulatory mechanisms were established. Future work will be engaged in analysing whether these in vitro findings are also physiologically relevant in regard to prevention and therapy of gastrointestinal diseases. Within the scope of this work, in Paper I and II it could be demonstrated that butyrate and mesalazine act via PPARgamma to induce their anti-proliferative and pro-apoptotic actions along the caspase signalling pathway. Activation of the intrinsic and extrinsic signalling trail and the down-regulation of anti-apoptotic proteins are responsible for increased caspase-3 activity caused by butyrate. In contrast, mesalazine merely activates this cascade via the extrinsic trail and the IAPs. Moreover, a signal transduction pathway leading to increased cell death via p38 MAPK - PPARgamma - caspase-3 in response to butyrate was unveiled. In addition, there is strong evidence that mesalazine-mediated pro-apoptotic and growth-inhibitory abilities are controlled by PPARgamma-dependent and -independent mechanisms which appear to be triggered at least in part by the modulation of the tumor suppressor gene PTEN and the oncoprotein c-myc, respectively. In Paper III and IV the induction of the APs HBD-2 and LL-37 in response to the dietary HDAC inhibitors butyrate and SFN was pinpointed. Regarding the molecular events of this regulation, the data presented in this thesis provide strong evidence for the involvement of VDR in HBD-2- and LL-37-induced gene expression, while the participation of PPARgamma was excluded. Moreover, the role for p38 MAPK and TGF-beta1 in the up-regulation of LL-37 caused by butyrate was established. In contrast, SFN-mediated induction of HBD-2 is modulated via ERK1/2 signalling. The findings in Paper V clearly refer to the involvement of the nuclear hormone receptors PPARgamma and VDR in butyrate-mediated suppression of inducible NFkappaB activation dependent on the stimulated signalling pathway caused by LPS or TNFalpha. Moreover, an inhibitory role for VDR in the regulation of basal NFkappaB activation was revealed. On the contrary, a modulating role for PPARgamma on basal NFkappaB could be debarred. Altogether the data presented in this thesis not only provide new insights in the understanding of the fundamental gastrointestinal physiology regulated by nuclear hormone receptors, but also may offer opportunities for the development of potential drug targets and therapeutic strategies in the treatment of IBD and CRC.