Zeelenberg Ingrid S, Ruuls-Van Stalle Lisette, Roos Ed
Division of Cell Biology, The Netherlands Cancer Institute, 1066 CX Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Cancer Res. 2003 Jul 1;63(13):3833-9.
CXCR4, the receptor for the chemokine stromal cell-derived factor (SDF)-1 (CXCL12), is involved in lymphocyte trafficking. We have demonstrated previously that it is required for invasion of lymphoma cells into tissues and therefore essential for lymphoma metastasis. CXCR4 is also expressed by carcinoma cells, and CXCR4 antibodies were recently shown to reduce metastasis of a mammary carcinoma cell line. This was also ascribed to impaired invasion. We have blocked CXCR4 function in CT-26 colon carcinoma cells by transfection of SDF-1, extended with a KDEL sequence. The SDF-KDEL protein is retained in the endoplasmic reticulum by the KDEL-receptor and binds CXCR4, which is thus prevented from reaching the cell surface. We found that metastasis of these cells to liver and lungs was greatly reduced and often completely blocked. Surprisingly, however, our observations indicate that this was not attributable to inhibition of invasion but rather to impairment of outgrowth of micrometastases: (a) in contrast to the lymphoma cells, metastasis was not affected by the transfected S1 subunit of pertussis toxin. S1 completely inhibited Gi protein signaling, which is required for SDF-1-induced invasion; (b) CXCR4 levels were very low in CT-26 cells grown in vitro but strongly up-regulated in vivo. Strong up-regulation was not seen in the lungs until 7 days after tail vein injection. CXCR4 can thus have no role in initial invasion in the lungs; and (c) CXCR4-deficient cells did colonize the lungs to the same extent as control cells and survived. However, they did not expand, whereas control cells proliferated rapidly after a lag period of > or = 7 days. We conclude that CXCR4 is up-regulated by the microenvironment and that isolated metastatic cells are likely to require CXCR4 signals to initiate proliferation. Our results suggest that CXCR4 inhibitors have potential as anticancer agents to suppress outgrowth of micrometastases.
趋化因子基质细胞衍生因子(SDF)-1(CXCL12)的受体CXCR4参与淋巴细胞的迁移。我们之前已经证明,它是淋巴瘤细胞侵入组织所必需的,因此对淋巴瘤转移至关重要。癌细胞也表达CXCR4,最近有研究表明,CXCR4抗体可减少一种乳腺癌细胞系的转移。这也归因于侵袭能力受损。我们通过转染带有KDEL序列的SDF-1,在CT-26结肠癌细胞中阻断了CXCR4的功能。SDF-KDEL蛋白通过KDEL受体保留在内质网中,并与CXCR4结合,从而阻止其到达细胞表面。我们发现,这些细胞向肝脏和肺部的转移大大减少,且常常完全被阻断。然而,令人惊讶的是,我们的观察结果表明,这并非归因于侵袭的抑制,而是微转移灶生长的受损:(a)与淋巴瘤细胞不同,转移不受转染的百日咳毒素S1亚基的影响。S1完全抑制了SDF-1诱导侵袭所需的Gi蛋白信号传导;(b)在体外培养的CT-26细胞中,CXCR4水平非常低,但在体内则强烈上调。直到尾静脉注射7天后,肺部才出现强烈上调。因此,CXCR4在肺部的初始侵袭中可能不起作用;(c)CXCR4缺陷细胞在肺部的定植程度与对照细胞相同,并且能够存活。然而,它们并未增殖,而对照细胞在≥7天的延迟期后迅速增殖。我们得出结论,CXCR4被微环境上调,孤立的转移细胞可能需要CXCR4信号来启动增殖。我们的结果表明,CXCR4抑制剂作为抗癌药物具有抑制微转移灶生长的潜力。