Department of Pathology, University of Virginia School of Medicine, Charlottesville, VA, 22908, USA.
Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA, 22908, USA.
BMC Cancer. 2018 Jul 6;18(1):718. doi: 10.1186/s12885-018-4619-8.
Infiltration into lymphatic vessels is a critical step in breast cancer metastasis. Lymphatics undergo changes that facilitate metastasis as a result of activation of the cells lining lymphatic vessels, lymphatic endothelial cells (LECs). Inhibition of activation by targeting VEGFR3 can reduce invasion toward lymphatics. To best benefit patients, this approach should be coupled with standard of care that slows tumor growth, such as chemotherapy. Little is known about how chemotherapies, like docetaxel, may influence lymphatics and conversely, how lymphatics can alter responses to therapy.
A novel 3D in vitro co-culture model of the human breast tumor microenvironment was employed to examine the contribution of LECs to tumor invasion and viability with docetaxel and anti-VEGFR3, using three cell lines, MDA-MB-231, HCC38, and HCC1806. In vivo, the 4T1 mouse model of breast carcinoma was used to examine the efficacy of combinatorial therapy with docetaxel and anti-VEGFR3 on lymph node metastasis and tumor growth. Lymphangiogenesis in these mice was analyzed by immunohistochemistry and flow cytometry. Luminex analysis was used to measure expression of lymphangiogenic cytokines.
In vitro, tumor cell invasion significantly increased with docetaxel when LECs were present; this effect was attenuated by inhibition of VEGFR3. LECs reduced docetaxel-induced cell death independent of VEGFR3. In vivo, docetaxel significantly increased breast cancer metastasis to the lymph node. Docetaxel and anti-VEGFR3 combination therapy reduced lymph node and lung metastasis in 4T1 and synergized to reduce tumor growth. Docetaxel induced VEGFR3-dependent vessel enlargement, lymphangiogenesis, and expansion of the LEC population in the peritumoral microenvironment, but not tumor-free stroma. Docetaxel caused an upregulation in pro-lymphangiogenic factors including VEGFC and TNF-α in the tumor microenvironment in vivo.
Here we present a counter-therapeutic effect of docetaxel chemotherapy that triggers cancer cells to elicit lymphangiogenesis. In turn, lymphatics reduce cancer response to docetaxel by altering the cytokine milieu in breast cancer. These changes lead to an increase in tumor cell invasion and survival under docetaxel treatment, ultimately reducing docetaxel efficacy. These docetaxel-induced effects can be mitigated by anti-VEGFR3 therapy, resulting in a synergism between these treatments that reduces tumor growth and metastasis.
浸润淋巴管是乳腺癌转移的关键步骤。淋巴管会发生变化,从而促进转移,这是由于淋巴管内皮细胞(LEC)的激活。通过靶向 VEGFR3 抑制激活可以减少向淋巴管的侵袭。为了使患者最大受益,这种方法应该与减缓肿瘤生长的标准治疗方法(如化疗)相结合。关于化疗药物(如多西他赛)如何影响淋巴管,以及淋巴管如何改变对治疗的反应,人们知之甚少。
采用一种新的人乳腺癌肿瘤微环境的 3D 体外共培养模型,使用三种细胞系 MDA-MB-231、HCC38 和 HCC1806,研究 LEC 对多西他赛和抗 VEGFR3 诱导的肿瘤侵袭和活力的贡献。在体内,使用 4T1 乳腺癌小鼠模型研究多西他赛和抗 VEGFR3 联合治疗对淋巴结转移和肿瘤生长的疗效。通过免疫组织化学和流式细胞术分析这些小鼠的淋巴管生成。使用 Luminex 分析测量淋巴管生成细胞因子的表达。
在体外,当存在 LEC 时,肿瘤细胞的侵袭显著增加,而 VEGFR3 的抑制则减弱了这种作用。LEC 减少了多西他赛诱导的细胞死亡,而与 VEGFR3 无关。在体内,多西他赛显著增加了乳腺癌向淋巴结的转移。多西他赛和抗 VEGFR3 联合治疗减少了 4T1 中的淋巴结和肺转移,并协同减少了肿瘤生长。多西他赛诱导 VEGFR3 依赖性血管扩张、淋巴管生成和肿瘤周围微环境中 LEC 群体的扩张,但肿瘤无基质不受影响。多西他赛在体内引起肿瘤微环境中促淋巴管生成因子(包括 VEGFC 和 TNF-α)的上调。
在这里,我们提出了多西他赛化疗的一种反治疗作用,即触发癌细胞引发淋巴管生成。反过来,淋巴管通过改变乳腺癌中的细胞因子环境来降低癌症对多西他赛的反应。这些变化导致在多西他赛治疗下肿瘤细胞侵袭和存活增加,最终降低了多西他赛的疗效。通过抗 VEGFR3 治疗可以减轻多西他赛引起的这些影响,从而使这些治疗方法产生协同作用,减少肿瘤生长和转移。