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Macrophages Promote Tumor Cell Extravasation across an Endothelial Barrier through Thin Membranous Connections

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Breast cancer is one of the most common cancers in women and despite improvements in treatments, patients suffering from metastatic disease still have a very low survival rate. A rate-limiting step is the seeding of tumor cells from the blood into the metastatic site. Macrophages are...

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Autores principales: Genna, Alessandro, Duran, Camille L., Entenberg, David, Condeelis, John S., Cox, Dianne
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10093384/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37046751
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers15072092
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author Genna, Alessandro
Duran, Camille L.
Entenberg, David
Condeelis, John S.
Cox, Dianne
author_facet Genna, Alessandro
Duran, Camille L.
Entenberg, David
Condeelis, John S.
Cox, Dianne
author_sort Genna, Alessandro
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Breast cancer is one of the most common cancers in women and despite improvements in treatments, patients suffering from metastatic disease still have a very low survival rate. A rate-limiting step is the seeding of tumor cells from the blood into the metastatic site. Macrophages are a key cell type in the metastatic niche, which are important for tumor cell seeding despite being separated from the tumor cells in the vasculature by an endothelial barrier. We found that macrophages and tumor cells make thin membranous connections through the endothelial barrier to assist in tumor cell crossing. These structures are similar to tunneling nanotubes that we previously showed were important for tumor cell invasion. We found that these macrophage-mediated connections were important for tumor crossing the endothelial barrier and for metastatic seeding. This new finding suggests that targeting tunneling nanotubes may limit tumor spread. ABSTRACT: Macrophages are important players involved in the progression of breast cancer, including in seeding the metastatic niche. However, the mechanism by which macrophages in the lung parenchyma interact with tumor cells in the vasculature to promote tumor cell extravasation at metastatic sites is not clear. To mimic macrophage-driven tumor cell extravasation, we used an in vitro assay (eTEM) in which an endothelial monolayer and a matrigel-coated filter separated tumor cells and macrophages from each other. The presence of macrophages promoted tumor cell extravasation, while macrophage conditioned media was insufficient to stimulate tumor cell extravasation in vitro. This finding is consistent with a requirement for direct contact between macrophages and tumor cells. We observed the presence of Thin Membranous Connections (TMCs) resembling similar structures formed between macrophages and tumor cells called tunneling nanotubes, which we previously demonstrated to be important in tumor cell invasion in vitro and in vivo. To determine if TMCs are important for tumor cell extravasation, we used macrophages with reduced levels of endogenous M-Sec (TNFAIP2), which causes a defect in tunneling nanotube formation. As predicted, these macrophages showed reduced macrophage-tumor cell TMCs. In both, human and murine breast cancer cell lines, there was also a concomitant reduction in tumor cell extravasation in vitro when co-cultured with M-Sec deficient macrophages compared to control macrophages. We also detected TMCs formed between macrophages and tumor cells through the endothelial layer in the eTEM assay. Furthermore, tumor cells were more frequently found in pores under the endothelium that contain macrophage protrusions. To determine the role of macrophage-tumor cell TMCs in vivo, we generated an M-Sec deficient mouse. Using an in vivo model of experimental metastasis, we detected a significant reduction in the number of metastatic lesions in M-Sec deficient mice compared to wild type mice. There was no difference in the size of the metastases, consistent with a defect specific to tumor cell extravasation and not metastatic outgrowth. Additionally, with an examination of time-lapse intravital-imaging (IVI) data sets of breast cancer cell extravasation in the lungs, we could detect the presence of TMCs between extravascular macrophages and vascular tumor cells. Overall, our data indicate that macrophage TMCs play an important role in promoting the extravasation of circulating tumor cells in the lungs.
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spelling pubmed-100933842023-04-13 Macrophages Promote Tumor Cell Extravasation across an Endothelial Barrier through Thin Membranous Connections Genna, Alessandro Duran, Camille L. Entenberg, David Condeelis, John S. Cox, Dianne Cancers (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Breast cancer is one of the most common cancers in women and despite improvements in treatments, patients suffering from metastatic disease still have a very low survival rate. A rate-limiting step is the seeding of tumor cells from the blood into the metastatic site. Macrophages are a key cell type in the metastatic niche, which are important for tumor cell seeding despite being separated from the tumor cells in the vasculature by an endothelial barrier. We found that macrophages and tumor cells make thin membranous connections through the endothelial barrier to assist in tumor cell crossing. These structures are similar to tunneling nanotubes that we previously showed were important for tumor cell invasion. We found that these macrophage-mediated connections were important for tumor crossing the endothelial barrier and for metastatic seeding. This new finding suggests that targeting tunneling nanotubes may limit tumor spread. ABSTRACT: Macrophages are important players involved in the progression of breast cancer, including in seeding the metastatic niche. However, the mechanism by which macrophages in the lung parenchyma interact with tumor cells in the vasculature to promote tumor cell extravasation at metastatic sites is not clear. To mimic macrophage-driven tumor cell extravasation, we used an in vitro assay (eTEM) in which an endothelial monolayer and a matrigel-coated filter separated tumor cells and macrophages from each other. The presence of macrophages promoted tumor cell extravasation, while macrophage conditioned media was insufficient to stimulate tumor cell extravasation in vitro. This finding is consistent with a requirement for direct contact between macrophages and tumor cells. We observed the presence of Thin Membranous Connections (TMCs) resembling similar structures formed between macrophages and tumor cells called tunneling nanotubes, which we previously demonstrated to be important in tumor cell invasion in vitro and in vivo. To determine if TMCs are important for tumor cell extravasation, we used macrophages with reduced levels of endogenous M-Sec (TNFAIP2), which causes a defect in tunneling nanotube formation. As predicted, these macrophages showed reduced macrophage-tumor cell TMCs. In both, human and murine breast cancer cell lines, there was also a concomitant reduction in tumor cell extravasation in vitro when co-cultured with M-Sec deficient macrophages compared to control macrophages. We also detected TMCs formed between macrophages and tumor cells through the endothelial layer in the eTEM assay. Furthermore, tumor cells were more frequently found in pores under the endothelium that contain macrophage protrusions. To determine the role of macrophage-tumor cell TMCs in vivo, we generated an M-Sec deficient mouse. Using an in vivo model of experimental metastasis, we detected a significant reduction in the number of metastatic lesions in M-Sec deficient mice compared to wild type mice. There was no difference in the size of the metastases, consistent with a defect specific to tumor cell extravasation and not metastatic outgrowth. Additionally, with an examination of time-lapse intravital-imaging (IVI) data sets of breast cancer cell extravasation in the lungs, we could detect the presence of TMCs between extravascular macrophages and vascular tumor cells. Overall, our data indicate that macrophage TMCs play an important role in promoting the extravasation of circulating tumor cells in the lungs. MDPI 2023-03-31 /pmc/articles/PMC10093384/ /pubmed/37046751 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers15072092 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Genna, Alessandro
Duran, Camille L.
Entenberg, David
Condeelis, John S.
Cox, Dianne
Macrophages Promote Tumor Cell Extravasation across an Endothelial Barrier through Thin Membranous Connections
title Macrophages Promote Tumor Cell Extravasation across an Endothelial Barrier through Thin Membranous Connections
title_full Macrophages Promote Tumor Cell Extravasation across an Endothelial Barrier through Thin Membranous Connections
title_fullStr Macrophages Promote Tumor Cell Extravasation across an Endothelial Barrier through Thin Membranous Connections
title_full_unstemmed Macrophages Promote Tumor Cell Extravasation across an Endothelial Barrier through Thin Membranous Connections
title_short Macrophages Promote Tumor Cell Extravasation across an Endothelial Barrier through Thin Membranous Connections
title_sort macrophages promote tumor cell extravasation across an endothelial barrier through thin membranous connections
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10093384/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37046751
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers15072092
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