Chirgwin J M, Guise T A
Department of Medicine, University of Texas Health Science, Center at San Antonio, 78229-3900, USA.
Crit Rev Eukaryot Gene Expr. 2000;10(2):159-78.
In patients with advanced disease, several cancer types frequently metastasize to the skeleton, where they cause bone destruction. Osteolytic metastases are incurable and cause pain, hypercalcemia, fracture, and nerve compression syndromes. It was proposed over a century ago that certain cancers, such as that of the breast, preferentially metastasize to the favorable microenvironment provided by bone. Bone matrix is a rich store of immobilized growth factors that are released during bone resorption. Histological analysis of osteolytic bone metastases indicates that the bone destruction is mediated by the osteoclast rather than directly by the tumor cells. These observations suggest a vicious cycle driving the formation of osteolytic metastases: tumor cells secrete factors stimulating osteoclasts through adjacent bone marrow stromal cells; osteoclastic resorption in turn releases growth factors from the bone matrix; finally, locally released growth factors activate the tumor cells. This vicious cycle model has now been confirmed at the molecular level. In particular, transforming growth factor beta (TGF3beta) is abundant in bone matrix and released as a consequence of osteoclastic bone resorption. Bone-derived TGFbeta plays an integral role in promoting the development and progression of osteolytic bone metastases by inducing tumor production of parathyroid hormone-related protein (PTHrP), a known stimulator of osteoclastic bone resorption. In breast cancer cells TGFbeta appears to stimulate PTHrP secretion by a posttranscriptional mechanism through both Smad and p38 mitogen activated protein (MAP) kinase signaling pathways. Osteolytic metastases can be suppressed in vivo by inhibition of bone resorption, blockade of TGFbeta signaling in tumor cells, and by neutralization of PTHrP. Other factors released from bone matrix may also act on tumor cells in bone, which in turn may produce other factors that stimulate bone resorption, following the vicious cycle paradigm established for TGFbeta and PTHrP. An understanding at the molecular level of the mechanisms of osteolytic metastasis will result in more effective therapies for this devastating complication of cancer.
在晚期疾病患者中,几种癌症类型经常转移至骨骼,在那里它们会导致骨质破坏。溶骨性转移无法治愈,并会引起疼痛、高钙血症、骨折和神经压迫综合征。一个多世纪前有人提出,某些癌症,如乳腺癌,优先转移至骨骼所提供的有利微环境。骨基质是固定生长因子的丰富储存库,这些生长因子在骨吸收过程中被释放。对溶骨性骨转移的组织学分析表明,骨质破坏是由破骨细胞介导的,而不是由肿瘤细胞直接介导的。这些观察结果提示了一个驱动溶骨性转移形成的恶性循环:肿瘤细胞分泌因子,通过相邻的骨髓基质细胞刺激破骨细胞;破骨细胞的吸收反过来又从骨基质中释放出生长因子;最后,局部释放的生长因子激活肿瘤细胞。这种恶性循环模型现在已在分子水平上得到证实。特别是,转化生长因子β(TGFβ)在骨基质中含量丰富,并因破骨细胞的骨吸收而释放。骨源性TGFβ通过诱导甲状旁腺激素相关蛋白(PTHrP)的肿瘤产生,在促进溶骨性骨转移的发展和进展中发挥不可或缺的作用,PTHrP是一种已知的破骨细胞骨吸收刺激因子。在乳腺癌细胞中,TGFβ似乎通过Smad和p38丝裂原活化蛋白(MAP)激酶信号通路,通过转录后机制刺激PTHrP分泌。通过抑制骨吸收、阻断肿瘤细胞中的TGFβ信号传导以及中和PTHrP,可以在体内抑制溶骨性转移。从骨基质中释放的其他因子也可能作用于骨中的肿瘤细胞,反过来这些肿瘤细胞可能产生其他刺激骨吸收的因子,遵循为TGFβ和PTHrP建立的恶性循环模式。在分子水平上理解溶骨性转移的机制将为这种癌症的毁灭性并发症带来更有效的治疗方法。