Delprat Victor, Huart Camille, Feron Olivier, Soncin Fabrice, Michiels Carine
Biochemistry and Cellular Biology Research Unit (URBC), Namur Research Institute for LIfe Sciences (NARILIS), University of Namur (UNamur), Namur, Belgium.
Pole of Pharmacology and Therapeutics (FATH 5349), Institut de recherche expérimentale et clinique, UCLouvain, Brussels, Belgium.
Front Oncol. 2022 Sep 28;12:961753. doi: 10.3389/fonc.2022.961753. eCollection 2022.
Cycling hypoxia (cyH), neo-angiogenesis, and tumor-associated macrophages are key features of the tumor microenvironment. In this study, we demonstrate that cyH potentiates the induction by unpolarized and M1-like macrophages of endothelial inflammatory phenotype and adhesiveness for monocytes and cancer cells. This process triggers a positive feedback loop sustaining tumor inflammation. This work opens the door for innovative therapeutic strategies to treat tumor inflammation and metastasis. In cancers, the interaction between macrophages and endothelial cells (ECs) regulates tumor inflammation and metastasis. These cells are both affected by cycling hypoxia (cyH), also called intermittent hypoxia, a feature of the tumor microenvironment. cyH is also known to favor tumor inflammation and metastasis. Nonetheless, the potential impact of cyH on the dialog between macrophages and ECs is still unknown. In this work, the effects of unpolarized, M1-like, and M2-like macrophages exposed to normoxia, chronic hypoxia (chH), and cyH on endothelial adhesion molecule expression, pro-inflammatory gene expression, and EC adhesiveness for monocytes and cancer cells were investigated. cyH increased the ability of unpolarized and M1-like macrophages to induce EC inflammation and to increase the expression of the EC endothelial adhesion molecule ICAM1, respectively. Unpolarized, M1-like, and M2-like macrophages were all able to promote EC adhesive properties toward cancer cells. Furthermore, the ability of macrophages (mostly M1-like) to shift EC phenotype toward one allowing cancer cell and monocyte adhesion onto ECs was potentiated by cyH. These effects were specific to cyH because they were not observed with chH. Together, these results show that cyH amplifies the effects of macrophages on ECs, which may promote tumor inflammation and metastasis.
循环性缺氧(cyH)、新生血管生成和肿瘤相关巨噬细胞是肿瘤微环境的关键特征。在本研究中,我们证明cyH增强了未极化和M1样巨噬细胞诱导内皮细胞炎症表型以及对单核细胞和癌细胞的黏附性。这一过程触发了维持肿瘤炎症的正反馈回路。这项工作为治疗肿瘤炎症和转移的创新治疗策略打开了大门。在癌症中,巨噬细胞与内皮细胞(ECs)之间的相互作用调节肿瘤炎症和转移。这些细胞都受到循环性缺氧(cyH)的影响,cyH也被称为间歇性缺氧,是肿瘤微环境的一个特征。已知cyH也有利于肿瘤炎症和转移。然而,cyH对巨噬细胞与ECs之间对话的潜在影响仍然未知。在这项工作中,研究了暴露于常氧、慢性缺氧(chH)和cyH的未极化、M1样和M2样巨噬细胞对内皮黏附分子表达、促炎基因表达以及ECs对单核细胞和癌细胞的黏附性的影响。cyH分别增强了未极化和M1样巨噬细胞诱导ECs炎症以及增加EC内皮黏附分子ICAM1表达的能力。未极化、M1样和M2样巨噬细胞都能够促进ECs对癌细胞的黏附特性。此外,cyH增强了巨噬细胞(主要是M1样)将ECs表型转变为允许癌细胞和单核细胞黏附到ECs上的能力。这些效应是cyH特有的,因为在chH条件下未观察到。总之,这些结果表明cyH放大了巨噬细胞对ECs的影响,这可能促进肿瘤炎症和转移。