Hayashi Yoshito, Tsujii Masahiko, Kodama Takahiro, Akasaka Tomofumi, Kondo Jumpei, Hikita Hayato, Inoue Takuya, Tsujii Yoshiki, Maekawa Akira, Yoshii Shunsuke, Shinzaki Shinichiro, Watabe Kenji, Tomita Yasuhiko, Inoue Masahiro, Tatsumi Tomohide, Iijima Hideki, Takehara Tetsuo
Department of Pathology and.
Department of Biochemistry, Osaka Medical Center for Cancer and Cardiovascular Diseases, Osaka 537-8511, Japan.
Carcinogenesis. 2016 Oct;37(10):972-984. doi: 10.1093/carcin/bgw085. Epub 2016 Aug 12.
Cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) create a microenvironment that contributes to tumor growth; however, the mechanism by which fibroblasts are phenotypically altered to CAFs remains unclear. Loss or mutation of the tumor suppressor p53 plays a crucial role in cancer progression. Herein, we analyzed how the p53 status of cancer cells affects fibroblasts by investigating the in vivo and in vitro effects of loss of p53 function in cancer cells on phenotypic changes in fibroblasts and subsequent tumor progression in human colon cancer cell lines containing wild-type p53 and in cells with a p53 functional deficiency. The growth of p53-deficient tumors was significantly enhanced in the presence of fibroblasts compared with that of p53-wild-type tumors or p53-deficient tumors without fibroblasts. p53-deficient cancer cells produced reactive oxygen species, which activated fibroblasts to mediate angiogenesis by secreting vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) both in vivo and in vitro Activated fibroblasts significantly contributed to tumor progression. Deletion of fibroblast-derived VEGF or treatment with N-acetylcysteine suppressed the growth of p53-deficient xenograft tumors. The growth effect of blocking VEGF secreted from cancer cells was equivalent regardless of p53 functional status. Human colon cancer tissues also showed a significant positive correlation between p53 cancer cell staining activated fibroblasts and microvessel density. These results reveal that fibroblasts were altered by exposure to p53-deficient epithelial cancer cells and contributed to tumor progression by promoting neovascularization. Thus, p53 acts as a modulator of the tumor microenvironment.
癌症相关成纤维细胞(CAFs)营造了一种有助于肿瘤生长的微环境;然而,成纤维细胞表型转变为CAFs的机制仍不清楚。肿瘤抑制因子p53的缺失或突变在癌症进展中起关键作用。在此,我们通过研究癌细胞中p53功能缺失对成纤维细胞表型变化以及后续人结肠癌细胞系(含野生型p53和p53功能缺陷型细胞)肿瘤进展的体内和体外影响,来分析癌细胞的p53状态如何影响成纤维细胞。与p53野生型肿瘤或无成纤维细胞的p53缺陷型肿瘤相比,在有成纤维细胞存在的情况下,p53缺陷型肿瘤的生长显著增强。p53缺陷型癌细胞产生活性氧,其在体内和体外均可激活成纤维细胞,使其通过分泌血管内皮生长因子(VEGF)来介导血管生成。被激活的成纤维细胞对肿瘤进展有显著促进作用。敲除成纤维细胞来源的VEGF或用N - 乙酰半胱氨酸处理可抑制p53缺陷型异种移植肿瘤的生长。无论p53功能状态如何,阻断癌细胞分泌的VEGF的生长抑制效果相当。人结肠癌组织中p53癌细胞染色、激活的成纤维细胞与微血管密度之间也呈现显著正相关。这些结果表明,成纤维细胞因暴露于p53缺陷型上皮癌细胞而发生改变,并通过促进新生血管形成来推动肿瘤进展。因此,p53充当肿瘤微环境的调节因子。