Department of Cell Biology, Radboud University Medical Center, 6525 GA Nijmegen, the Netherlands; Institute for Biomedical Engineering, ETH and University of Zurich, 8093 Zurich, Switzerland.
Department of Cell Biology, Radboud University Medical Center, 6525 GA Nijmegen, the Netherlands; Department of Genitourinary Medical Oncology, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX 77030, USA.
Curr Biol. 2017 Feb 6;27(3):392-400. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2016.11.057. Epub 2017 Jan 12.
Cancer metastases arise from a multi-step process that requires metastasizing tumor cells to adapt to signaling input from varying tissue environments [1]. As an early metastatic event, cancer cell dissemination occurs through different migration programs, including multicellular, collective, and single-cell mesenchymal or amoeboid migration [2-4]. Migration modes can interconvert based on changes in cell adhesion, cytoskeletal mechanotransduction [5], and/or proteolysis [6], most likely under the control of transcriptional programs such as the epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) [7, 8]. However, how plasticity of tumor cell migration and EMT is spatiotemporally controlled and connected upon challenge by the tumor microenvironment remains unclear. Using 3D cultures of collectively invading breast and head and neck cancer spheroids, here we identify hypoxia, a hallmark of solid tumors [9], as an inducer of the collective-to-amoeboid transition (CAT), promoting the dissemination of amoeboid-moving single cells from collective invasion strands. Hypoxia-induced amoeboid detachment was driven by hypoxia-inducible factor 1 (HIF-1), followed the downregulation of E-cadherin, and produced heterogeneous cell subsets whose phenotype and migration were dependent (∼30%) or independent (∼70%) of Twist-mediated EMT. EMT-like and EMT-independent amoeboid cell subsets showed stable amoeboid movement over hours as well as leukocyte-like traits, including rounded morphology, matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-independent migration, and nuclear deformation. Cancer cells undergoing pharmacological stabilization of HIFs retained their constitutive ability for early metastatic seeding in an experimental model of lung metastasis, indicating that hypoxia-induced CAT enhances cell release rather than early organ colonization. Induced by metabolic challenge, amoeboid movement may thus constitute a common endpoint of both EMT-dependent and EMT-independent cancer dissemination programs.
癌症转移是一个多步骤的过程,需要转移的肿瘤细胞适应来自不同组织环境的信号输入[1]。作为早期转移事件,癌细胞扩散通过不同的迁移程序发生,包括多细胞、集体和单细胞间充质或阿米巴样迁移[2-4]。迁移模式可以根据细胞黏附、细胞骨架力学转导[5]和/或蛋白水解[6]的变化而相互转换,很可能在转录程序的控制下,如上皮-间充质转化(EMT)[7,8]。然而,肿瘤细胞迁移和 EMT 的可塑性如何在肿瘤微环境的挑战下时空上受到控制和连接仍然不清楚。在这里,我们使用集体侵袭的乳腺癌和头颈部癌症球体的 3D 培养物,确定了缺氧,这是实体瘤的一个标志[9],作为集体到阿米巴样转变(CAT)的诱导剂,促进了阿米巴样运动的单个细胞从集体侵袭链中的扩散。缺氧诱导的阿米巴样脱离由缺氧诱导因子 1(HIF-1)驱动,随后 E-钙黏蛋白下调,并产生了表型和迁移依赖(约 30%)或独立(约 70%)于 Twist 介导的 EMT 的异质细胞亚群。EMT 样和 EMT 独立的阿米巴样细胞亚群在数小时内保持稳定的阿米巴样运动以及白细胞样特征,包括圆形形态、基质金属蛋白酶(MMP)独立迁移和核变形。在肺癌转移的实验模型中,通过药物稳定 HIFs 的癌细胞保留了它们的早期转移性播种的固有能力,表明缺氧诱导的 CAT 增强了细胞释放,而不是早期器官定植。因此,由代谢挑战引起的阿米巴样运动可能构成 EMT 依赖和 EMT 独立的癌症扩散程序的共同终点。