Menter D G, Herrmann J L, Nicolson G L
Department of Tumor Biology, University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston 77030.
Clin Exp Metastasis. 1995 Mar;13(2):67-88. doi: 10.1007/BF00133612.
The brain is a unique microenvironment enclosed by the skull, lacking lymphatic drainage and maintaining a highly regulated vascular transport barrier. To metastasize to the brain malignant tumor cells must attach to microvessel endothelial cells, respond to brain-derived invasion factors, invade the blood-brain barrier and respond to survival and growth factors. Trophic factors are important in brain invasion because they can act to stimulate this process. In responsive malignant cells trophic factors such as neurotrophins can promote invasion by enhancing the production of basement membrane-degradative enzymes (such as type IV collagenase/gelatinase and heparanase) capable of locally destroying the basement membrane and the blood-brain barrier. We examined human melanoma cell lines that exhibit varying abilities to form brain metastases. These melanoma lines express low-affinity neurotrophin receptor p75NTR in relation to their brain-metastatic potentials but the variants do not express trkA, the gene encoding a high affinity nerve growth factor (NGF) tyrosine kinase receptor p140trkA. Melanoma cells metastatic to brain also respond to paracrine factors made by brain cells. We have found that a paracrine form of transferrin is important in brain metastasis, and brain-metastatic cells respond to low levels of transferrin and express high levels of transferrin receptors. Brain-metastatic tumor cells can also produce autocrine factors and inhibitors that influence their growth, invasion and survival in the brain. We found that brain-metastatic melanoma cells synthesize transcripts for the following autocrine growth factors: TGF beta, bFGF, TGF alpha and IL-1 beta. Synthesis of these factors may influence the production of neurotrophins by adjacent brain cells, such as oligodendrocytes and astrocytes. Increased amounts of NGF were found in tumor-adjacent tissues at the invasion front of human melanoma tumors in brain biopsies. Trophic factors, autocrine growth factors, paracrine growth factors and other factors may determine whether metastatic cells can successfully invade, colonize and grow in the central nervous system.
大脑是一个被颅骨包围的独特微环境,缺乏淋巴引流,并维持着高度调节的血管运输屏障。恶性肿瘤细胞要转移至大脑,必须附着于微血管内皮细胞,对脑源性侵袭因子作出反应,侵入血脑屏障,并对生存和生长因子作出反应。营养因子在脑侵袭中很重要,因为它们可以刺激这一过程。在反应性恶性细胞中,神经营养因子等营养因子可通过增强能够局部破坏基底膜和血脑屏障的基底膜降解酶(如IV型胶原酶/明胶酶和乙酰肝素酶)的产生来促进侵袭。我们研究了具有不同脑转移能力的人黑色素瘤细胞系。这些黑色素瘤细胞系根据其脑转移潜能表达低亲和力神经营养因子受体p75NTR,但这些变体不表达trkA,trkA是编码高亲和力神经生长因子(NGF)酪氨酸激酶受体p140trkA的基因。转移至脑的黑色素瘤细胞也对脑细胞产生的旁分泌因子作出反应。我们发现,一种旁分泌形式的转铁蛋白在脑转移中很重要,脑转移细胞对低水平的转铁蛋白作出反应,并表达高水平的转铁蛋白受体。脑转移肿瘤细胞还可以产生自分泌因子和抑制剂,这些因子会影响它们在脑中的生长、侵袭和存活。我们发现,脑转移黑色素瘤细胞合成以下自分泌生长因子的转录本:转化生长因子β、碱性成纤维细胞生长因子、转化生长因子α和白细胞介素-1β。这些因子的合成可能会影响相邻脑细胞(如少突胶质细胞和星形胶质细胞)产生神经营养因子。在脑活检中,人类黑色素瘤肿瘤侵袭前沿的肿瘤相邻组织中发现了更多的神经生长因子。营养因子、自分泌生长因子、旁分泌生长因子和其他因子可能决定转移细胞是否能够在中枢神经系统中成功侵袭、定植和生长。