Denkins Yvonne, Reiland Jane, Roy Madhuchhanda, Sinnappah-Kang Neeta D, Galjour Jennifer, Murry Brian P, Blust Jason, Aucoin Rebecca, Marchetti Dario
Department of Comparative Biomedical Sciences, Louisiana State University School of Veterinary Medicine, Baton Rouge, LA 70803, USA.
Neuro Oncol. 2004 Apr;6(2):154-65. doi: 10.1215/s115285170300067x.
Brain metastasis, which occurs in 20% to 40% of all cancer patients, is an important cause of neoplastic morbidity and mortality. Successful invasion into the brain by tumor cells must include attachment to microvessel endothelial cells, penetration through the blood-brain barrier, and, of relevance, a response to brain survival and growth factors. Neurotrophins (NTs) are important in brain-invasive steps. Human melanoma cell lines express low-affinity NT receptor p75NTR in relation to their brain-metastatic propensity with their invasive properties being regulated by NGF, or nerve growth factor, the prototypic NT. They also express functional TrkC, the putative receptor for the invasion-promoting NT-3. In brain-metastatic melanoma cells, NTs promote invasion by enhancing the production of extracellular matrix (ECM)-degradative enzymes such as heparanase, an enzyme capable of locally destroying both ECM and the basement membrane of the blood-brain barrier. Heparanase is an endo-beta-d-glucuronidase that cleaves heparan sulfate (HS) chains of ECM HS proteoglycans, and it is a unique metastatic determinant because it is the dominant mammalian HS degradative enzyme. Brain-metastatic melanoma cells also produce autocrine/paracrine factors that influence their growth, invasion, and survival in the brain. Synthesis of these factors may serve to regulate NT production by brain cells adjacent to the neoplastic invasion front, such as astrocytes. Increased NT levels have been observed in tumor-adjacent tissues at the invasion front of human brain melanoma. Additionally, astrocytes may contribute to the brain-metastatic specificity of melanoma cells by producing NT-regulated heparanase. Trophic, autocrine, and paracrine growth factors may therefore determine whether metastatic cells can successfully invade, colonize, and grow in the CNS.
脑转移发生于20%至40%的癌症患者中,是肿瘤发病和死亡的重要原因。肿瘤细胞成功侵入大脑必须包括附着于微血管内皮细胞、穿透血脑屏障,并且与对脑存活和生长因子的反应相关。神经营养因子(NTs)在脑侵袭步骤中很重要。人类黑色素瘤细胞系根据其脑转移倾向表达低亲和力NTs受体p75NTR,其侵袭特性受神经生长因子(NGF,典型的NTs)调节。它们还表达功能性TrkC,即促进侵袭的NTs-3的假定受体。在脑转移性黑色素瘤细胞中,NTs通过增强细胞外基质(ECM)降解酶如乙酰肝素酶的产生来促进侵袭,乙酰肝素酶是一种能够局部破坏ECM和血脑屏障基底膜的酶。乙酰肝素酶是一种内切β - d - 葡糖醛酸酶,可切割ECM硫酸乙酰肝素(HS)蛋白聚糖的HS链,它是一种独特的转移决定因素,因为它是主要的哺乳动物HS降解酶。脑转移性黑色素瘤细胞还产生自分泌/旁分泌因子,影响其在脑中的生长、侵袭和存活。这些因子的合成可能用于调节与肿瘤侵袭前沿相邻的脑细胞(如星形胶质细胞)产生NTs。在人脑黑色素瘤侵袭前沿的肿瘤邻近组织中已观察到NTs水平升高。此外,星形胶质细胞可能通过产生NTs调节的乙酰肝素酶来促进黑色素瘤细胞的脑转移特异性。因此,营养性、自分泌和旁分泌生长因子可能决定转移性细胞是否能在中枢神经系统中成功侵袭、定植和生长。