Duchalais Emilie, Guilluy Christophe, Nedellec Steven, Touvron Melissa, Bessard Anne, Touchefeu Yann, Bossard Céline, Boudin Hélène, Louarn Guy, Neunlist Michel, Van Landeghem Laurianne
Inserm U1235, Institut des Maladies de l'Appareil Digestif, Nantes, France.
Université de Nantes, Nantes, France.
Cell Mol Gastroenterol Hepatol. 2017 Oct 14;5(1):31-49. doi: 10.1016/j.jcmgh.2017.10.002. eCollection 2018.
BACKGROUND & AIMS: In several types of cancers, tumor cells invade adjacent tissues by migrating along the resident nerves of the tumor microenvironment. This process, called , typically occurs along extrinsic nerves, with Schwann cells providing physical guidance for the tumor cells. However, in the colorectal cancer microenvironment, the most abundant nervous structures belong to the nonmyelinated intrinsic enteric nervous system (ENS). In this study, we investigated whether colon cancer cells interact with the ENS.
Tumor epithelial cells (TECs) from human primary colon adenocarcinomas and cell lines were cocultured with primary cultures of ENS and cultures of human ENS plexus explants. By combining confocal and atomic force microscopy, as well as video microscopy, we assessed tumor cell adhesion and migration on the ENS. We identified the adhesion proteins involved using a proteomics approach based on biotin/streptavidin interaction, and their implication was confirmed further using selective blocking antibodies.
TEC adhered preferentially and with stronger adhesion forces to enteric nervous structures than to mesenchymal cells. TEC adhesion to ENS involved direct interactions with enteric neurons. Enteric neuron removal from ENS cultures led to a significant decrease in tumor cell adhesion. TECs migrated significantly longer and further when adherent on ENS compared with on mesenchymal cells, and their trajectory faithfully followed ENS structures. Blocking N-cadherin and L1CAM decreased TEC migration along ENS structures.
Our data show that the enteric neuronal network guides tumor cell migration, partly via L1CAM and N-cadherin. These results open a new avenue of research on the underlying mechanisms and consequences of perineural invasion in colorectal cancer.
在几种类型的癌症中,肿瘤细胞通过沿着肿瘤微环境中的驻留神经迁移来侵袭邻近组织。这个过程,称为 ,通常沿着外在神经发生,雪旺细胞为肿瘤细胞提供物理引导。然而,在结直肠癌微环境中,最丰富的神经结构属于无髓鞘的内在肠神经系统(ENS)。在本研究中,我们调查了结肠癌细胞是否与ENS相互作用。
将人原发性结肠腺癌的肿瘤上皮细胞(TECs)和细胞系与ENS原代培养物以及人ENS丛外植体培养物共培养。通过结合共聚焦显微镜和原子力显微镜以及视频显微镜,我们评估了肿瘤细胞在ENS上的粘附和迁移。我们使用基于生物素/链霉亲和素相互作用的蛋白质组学方法鉴定了参与的粘附蛋白,并使用选择性阻断抗体进一步证实了它们的作用。
与间充质细胞相比,TEC优先且以更强的粘附力粘附于肠神经结构。TEC对ENS的粘附涉及与肠神经元的直接相互作用。从ENS培养物中去除肠神经元导致肿瘤细胞粘附力显著降低。与粘附在间充质细胞上相比,TECs粘附在ENS上时迁移的时间明显更长、距离更远,并且它们的轨迹忠实地跟随ENS结构。阻断N-钙粘蛋白和L1CAM可减少TEC沿ENS结构的迁移。
我们的数据表明,肠神经元网络部分通过L1CAM和N-钙粘蛋白引导肿瘤细胞迁移。这些结果为结直肠癌中神经周围浸润的潜在机制和后果开辟了一条新的研究途径。