Ingber Donald E
Vascular Biology Program, Department of Pathology, Children's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, United States.
Semin Cancer Biol. 2008 Oct;18(5):356-64. doi: 10.1016/j.semcancer.2008.03.016. Epub 2008 Apr 1.
To advance cancer research in a transformative way, we must redefine the problem. Although epithelial cancers, such as breast cancer, may be caused by random somatic gene mutations, the reality is that this is only one of many ways to induce tumor formation. Cancers also can be produced in experimental systems in vitro and in vivo, for example, by inducing sustained alterations of extracellular matrix (ECM) structure. Moreover, certain epithelial cancers can be induced to 'reboot' and regenerate normal tissue morphology when combined with embryonic mesenchyme or exogenous ECM scaffolds that are produced through epithelial-stromal interactions. At the same time, work in the field of Mechanical Biology has revealed that many cell behaviors critical for cancer formation (e.g., growth, differentiation, motility, apoptosis) can be controlled by physical interactions between cells and their ECM adhesions that alter the mechanical force balance in the ECM, cell and cytoskeleton. Epithelial tumor progression also can be induced in vitro by changing ECM mechanics or altering cytoskeletal tension generation through manipulation of the Rho GTPase signaling pathway. Mechanical interactions between capillary cells and ECM that are mediated by Rho signaling similarly mediate control of capillary cell growth and angiogenesis, which are equally critical for cancer progression and metastasis. These findings question basic assumptions in the cancer field, and raise the intriguing possibility that cancer may be a reversible disease that results from progressive deregulation of tissue architecture, which leads to physical changes in cells and altered mechanical signaling. This perspective raises the possibility of developing a tissue engineering approach to cancer therapy in which biologically inspired materials that mimic the embryonic microenvironment are used to induce cancers to revert into normal tissues.
为了以变革性的方式推进癌症研究,我们必须重新定义问题。虽然上皮性癌症,如乳腺癌,可能是由随机的体细胞基因突变引起的,但实际情况是,这只是诱导肿瘤形成的众多方式之一。癌症也可以在体外和体内的实验系统中产生,例如,通过诱导细胞外基质(ECM)结构的持续改变。此外,当与通过上皮-间质相互作用产生的胚胎间充质或外源性ECM支架结合时,某些上皮性癌症可以被诱导“重启”并再生正常组织形态。与此同时,机械生物学领域的研究表明,许多对癌症形成至关重要的细胞行为(如生长、分化、运动、凋亡)可以通过细胞与其ECM黏附之间的物理相互作用来控制,这些相互作用会改变ECM、细胞和细胞骨架中的机械力平衡。通过操纵Rho GTPase信号通路改变ECM力学或改变细胞骨架张力的产生,也可以在体外诱导上皮肿瘤进展。由Rho信号介导的毛细血管细胞与ECM之间的机械相互作用同样介导了对毛细血管细胞生长和血管生成的控制,这对癌症进展和转移同样至关重要。这些发现质疑了癌症领域的基本假设,并提出了一个有趣的可能性,即癌症可能是一种可逆性疾病,它是由组织结构的渐进性失调导致的,这种失调会导致细胞的物理变化和机械信号改变。这种观点提出了开发一种癌症治疗组织工程方法的可能性,其中利用模仿胚胎微环境的生物启发材料来诱导癌症恢复为正常组织。