Cranford Taryn L, Velázquez Kandy T, Enos Reilly T, Bader Jackie E, Carson Meredith S, Chatzistamou Ioulia, Nagarkatti Mitzi, Murphy E Angela
a Department of Pathology , Microbiology & Immunology, School of Medicine, University of South Carolina , Columbia , SC , USA.
Cancer Biol Ther. 2017 Feb;18(2):85-93. doi: 10.1080/15384047.2016.1276135. Epub 2017 Jan 11.
Monocyte chemoattractant protein 1 (MCP-1) has been implicated as a major modulator in the progression of mammary tumorigenesis, largely due to its ability to recruit macrophages to the tumor microenvironment. Macrophages are key mediators in the connection between inflammation and cancer progression and have been shown to play an important role in tumorigenesis. Thus, MCP-1 may be a potential therapeutic target in inflammatory and difficult-to-treat cancers such as triple negative breast cancer (TNBC). We examined the effect of MCP-1 depletion on mammary tumorigenesis in a model of TNBC. Tumor measurements were conducted weekly (until 22 weeks of age) and at sacrifice (23 weeks of age) in female C3(1)/SV40Tag and C3(1)/SV40Tag MCP-1 deficient mice to determine tumor numbers and tumorvolumes. Histopathological scoring was performed at 12 weeks of age and 23 weeks of age. Gene expression of macrophage markers and inflammatory mediators were measured in the mammary gland and tumor microenvironment at sacrifice. As expected, MCP-1 depletion resulted in decreased tumorigenesis, indicated by reduced primary tumor volume and multiplicity, and a delay in tumor progression represented by histopathological scoring (12 weeks of age). Deficiency in MCP-1 significantly downregulated expression of macrophage markers in the mammary gland (Mertk and CD64) and the tumor microenvironment (CD64), and also reduced expression of inflammatory cytokines in the mammary gland (TNFα and IL-1β) and the tumor microenvironment (IL-6). These data support the hypothesis that MCP-1 expression contributes to increased tumorigenesis in a model of TNBC via recruitment of macrophages and subsequent increase in inflammatory mediators.
单核细胞趋化蛋白1(MCP-1)被认为是乳腺肿瘤发生发展过程中的主要调节因子,这主要归因于它能够将巨噬细胞招募至肿瘤微环境。巨噬细胞是炎症与癌症进展之间联系的关键介质,并且已被证明在肿瘤发生中发挥重要作用。因此,MCP-1可能是炎性及难治性癌症(如三阴性乳腺癌(TNBC))的潜在治疗靶点。我们在TNBC模型中研究了MCP-1缺失对乳腺肿瘤发生的影响。对雌性C3(1)/SV40Tag和C3(1)/SV40Tag MCP-1缺陷小鼠每周(直至22周龄)以及处死时(23周龄)进行肿瘤测量,以确定肿瘤数量和肿瘤体积。在12周龄和23周龄时进行组织病理学评分。处死时在乳腺和肿瘤微环境中测量巨噬细胞标志物及炎性介质的基因表达。正如预期的那样,MCP-1缺失导致肿瘤发生减少,表现为原发性肿瘤体积和数量减少,以及组织病理学评分(12周龄)所显示的肿瘤进展延迟。MCP-1缺陷显著下调了乳腺(Mertk和CD64)和肿瘤微环境(CD64)中巨噬细胞标志物的表达,同时也降低了乳腺(TNFα和IL-1β)和肿瘤微环境(IL-6)中炎性细胞因子的表达。这些数据支持了以下假设:在TNBC模型中,MCP-1的表达通过招募巨噬细胞并随后增加炎性介质,促进了肿瘤发生的增加。