Tumour Host Interaction Laboratory, The Francis Crick Institute, 1 Midland Road, NW1 1AT, London, UK; Sanz-Moreno Lab, Centre for Tumour Microenvironment, Barts Cancer Institute, Queen Mary University of London, Charterhouse Square, London, EC1M 6BQ, UK; Randall Division of Cell and Molecular Biophysics, King's College London, New Hunt's House, Guy's Campus, London, SE1 1UL, UK.
Sanz-Moreno Lab, Centre for Tumour Microenvironment, Barts Cancer Institute, Queen Mary University of London, Charterhouse Square, London, EC1M 6BQ, UK; Randall Division of Cell and Molecular Biophysics, King's College London, New Hunt's House, Guy's Campus, London, SE1 1UL, UK.
Cancer Lett. 2022 Sep 28;544:215800. doi: 10.1016/j.canlet.2022.215800. Epub 2022 Jul 6.
Cancer cells thrive when embedded in a fine-tuned cellular and extracellular environment or tumour microenvironment (TME). There is a general understanding of a co-evolution between cancer cells and their surrounding TME, pointing at a functional connection between cancer cells characteristics and the perturbations induced in their surrounding tissue. However, it has never been formally proven whether this functional connection needs to be set from the start or if aggressive cancer cells always dominate their microenvironmental any point in time. This would require a dedicated experimental setting where malignant cells are challenged to grow in a different TME from the one they would naturally create. Here we generated an experimental setting where we transiently perturb the secretory profile of aggressive breast cancer cells without affecting their intrinsic growth ability, which led to the initial establishment of an atypical TME. Interestingly, even if initially tumours are formed, this atypical TME evolves to impair long term in vivo cancer growth. Using a combination of in vivo transcriptomics, protein arrays and in vitro co-cultures, we found that the atypical TME culminates in the infiltration of macrophages with STAT1 activity. These macrophages show strong anti-tumoural functions which reduce long-term tumour growth, despite lacking canonical M1 markers. Importantly, gene signatures of the mesenchymal compartment of the TME, as well as the anti-tumoural macrophages, show striking prognostic power that correlates with less aggressive human breast cancers.
当癌细胞嵌入精细调节的细胞和细胞外环境或肿瘤微环境 (TME) 中时,它们会茁壮成长。人们普遍理解癌细胞与其周围 TME 之间的共同进化,这表明癌细胞特征与其周围组织中诱导的扰动之间存在功能联系。然而,从未有正式证据表明这种功能联系是否需要从一开始就建立,或者侵袭性癌细胞是否总是在任何时候都主导其微环境。这将需要一个专门的实验设置,其中恶性细胞被挑战在与它们自然形成的不同 TME 中生长。在这里,我们创建了一个实验设置,其中我们暂时改变侵袭性乳腺癌细胞的分泌谱,而不影响其内在生长能力,这导致了非典型 TME 的最初建立。有趣的是,即使最初形成了肿瘤,这种非典型 TME 也会发展为损害体内癌症的长期生长。通过体内转录组学、蛋白质阵列和体外共培养的组合,我们发现非典型 TME 最终导致具有 STAT1 活性的巨噬细胞浸润。这些巨噬细胞表现出强烈的抗肿瘤功能,尽管缺乏典型的 M1 标志物,但可以减少长期肿瘤生长。重要的是,TME 中间质区室的基因特征以及抗肿瘤巨噬细胞显示出惊人的预后能力,与侵袭性较低的人类乳腺癌相关。