Hurtado Pablo, Martínez-Pena Inés, Yepes-Rodríguez Sabrina, Bascoy-Otero Miguel, Abuín Carmen, Fernández-Santiago Cristóbal, Sánchez Laura, López-López Rafael, Piñeiro Roberto
Roche-Chus Joint Unit, Translational Medical Oncology Group (Oncomet), Health Research Institute of Santiago de Compostela, Santiago de Compostela, Spain.
Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red Cáncer, Madrid, Spain.
Front Cell Dev Biol. 2023 Mar 6;11:1076432. doi: 10.3389/fcell.2023.1076432. eCollection 2023.
The dynamic intercommunication between tumour cells and cells from the microenvironment, such as cancer-associated fibroblast (CAFs), is a key factor driving breast cancer (BC) metastasis. Clusters of circulating tumour cells (CTCs), known to bare a higher efficiency at establishing metastases, are found in the blood of BC patients, often accompanied by CAFs in heterotypic CTC-clusters. Previously we have shown the utility of CTC-clusters models and the zebrafish embryo as a model of metastasis to understand the biology of breast cancer CTC-clusters. In this work, we use the zebrafish embryo to study the interactions between CTCs in homotypic clusters and CTC-CAFs in heterotypic CTC-clusters to identify potential pro-metastatic traits derived from CTC-CAF communication. We found that upon dissemination CAFs seem to exert a pro-survival and pro-proliferative effect on the CTCs, but only when CTCs and CAFs remain joined as cell clusters. Our data indicate that the clustering of CTC and CAF allows the establishment of physical interactions that when maintained over time favour the selection of CTCs with a higher capacity to survive and proliferate upon dissemination. Importantly, this effect seems to be dependent on the survival of disseminated CAFs and was not observed in the presence of normal fibroblasts. Moreover, we show that CAFs can exert regulatory effects on the CTCs without being involved in promoting tumour cell invasion. Lastly, we show that the physical communication between BC cells and CAFs leads to the production of soluble factors involved in BC cell survival and proliferation. These findings suggest the existence of a CAF-regulatory effect on CTC survival and proliferation sustained by cell-to-cell contacts and highlight the need to understand the molecular mechanisms that mediate the interaction between the CTCs and CAFs in clusters enhancing the metastatic capacity of CTCs.
肿瘤细胞与微环境中的细胞(如癌症相关成纤维细胞(CAFs))之间的动态相互交流是驱动乳腺癌(BC)转移的关键因素。循环肿瘤细胞(CTC)簇在BC患者血液中被发现,其在建立转移方面具有更高的效率,且在异型CTC簇中常伴有CAFs。此前我们已证明CTC簇模型和斑马鱼胚胎作为转移模型对于理解乳腺癌CTC簇生物学特性的实用性。在这项工作中,我们利用斑马鱼胚胎研究同型簇中的CTC与异型CTC簇中的CTC-CAF之间的相互作用,以确定源自CTC-CAF交流的潜在促转移特性。我们发现,在播散过程中,CAFs似乎对CTC发挥促存活和促增殖作用,但仅当CTC和CAFs作为细胞簇保持连接时才会如此。我们的数据表明,CTC与CAF的聚集允许建立物理相互作用,随着时间的推移,这种相互作用有利于选择在播散后具有更高存活和增殖能力的CTC。重要的是,这种效应似乎依赖于播散的CAFs的存活,在存在正常成纤维细胞的情况下未观察到这种效应。此外,我们表明CAFs可以对CTC发挥调节作用而不参与促进肿瘤细胞侵袭。最后,我们表明BC细胞与CAFs之间的物理交流导致产生参与BC细胞存活和增殖的可溶性因子。这些发现表明存在一种由细胞间接触维持的CAF对CTC存活和增殖的调节作用,并强调需要了解介导簇中CTC与CAFs之间相互作用以增强CTC转移能力的分子机制。