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Macrophage-Tumor Cell Fusions from Peripheral Blood of Melanoma Patients

BACKGROUND: While the morbidity and mortality from cancer are largely attributable to its metastatic dissemination, the integral features of the cascade are not well understood. The widely accepted hypothesis is that the primary tumor microenvironment induces the epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition...

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Autores principales: Clawson, Gary A., Matters, Gail L., Xin, Ping, Imamura-Kawasawa, Yuka, Du, Zhen, Thiboutot, Diane M., Helm, Klaus F., Neves, Rogerio I., Abraham, Thomas
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4534457/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26267609
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0134320
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author Clawson, Gary A.
Matters, Gail L.
Xin, Ping
Imamura-Kawasawa, Yuka
Du, Zhen
Thiboutot, Diane M.
Helm, Klaus F.
Neves, Rogerio I.
Abraham, Thomas
author_facet Clawson, Gary A.
Matters, Gail L.
Xin, Ping
Imamura-Kawasawa, Yuka
Du, Zhen
Thiboutot, Diane M.
Helm, Klaus F.
Neves, Rogerio I.
Abraham, Thomas
author_sort Clawson, Gary A.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: While the morbidity and mortality from cancer are largely attributable to its metastatic dissemination, the integral features of the cascade are not well understood. The widely accepted hypothesis is that the primary tumor microenvironment induces the epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition in cancer cells, facilitating their escape into the bloodstream, possibly accompanied by cancer stem cells. An alternative theory for metastasis involves fusion of macrophages with tumor cells (MTFs). Here we culture and characterize apparent MTFs from blood of melanoma patients. METHODS: We isolated enriched CTC populations from peripheral blood samples from melanoma patients, and cultured them. We interrogated these cultured cells for characteristic BRAF mutations, and used confocal microscopy for immunophenotyping, motility, DNA content and chromatin texture analyses, and then conducted xenograft studies using nude mice. FINDINGS: Morphologically, the cultured MTFs were generally large with many pseudopod extensions and lamellipodia. Ultrastructurally, the cultured MTFs appeared to be macrophages. They were rich in mitochondria and lysosomes, as well as apparent melanosomes. The cultured MTF populations were all heterogeneous with regard to DNA content, containing aneuploid and/or high-ploidy cells, and they typically showed large sheets (and/or clumps) of cytoplasmic chromatin. This cytoplasmic DNA was found within heterogeneously-sized autophagic vacuoles, which prominently contained chromatin and micronuclei. Cultured MTFs uniformly expressed pan-macrophage markers (CD14, CD68) and macrophage markers indicative of M2 polarization (CD163, CD204, CD206). They also expressed melanocyte-specific markers (ALCAM, MLANA), epithelial biomarkers (KRT, EpCAM), as well as the pro-carcinogenic cytokine MIF along with functionally related stem cell markers (CXCR4, CD44). MTF cultures from individual patients (5 of 8) contained melanoma-specific BRAF activating mutations. Chromatin texture analysis of deconvoluted images showed condensed DNA (DAPI-intense) regions similar to focal regions described in stem cell fusions. MTFs were readily apparent in vivo in all human melanomas examined, often exhibiting even higher DNA content than the cultured MTFs. When cultured MTFs were transplanted subcutaneously in nude mice, they disseminated and produced metastatic lesions at distant sites. CONCLUSIONS AND HYPOTHESIS: Apparent MTFs are present in peripheral blood of patients with cutaneous melanomas, and they possess the ability to form metastatic lesions when transplanted into mice. We hypothesize that these MTFs arise at the periphery of primary tumors in vivo, that they readily enter the bloodstream and invade distant tissues, secreting cytokines (such as MIF) to prepare “niches” for colonization by metastasis initiating cells.
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spelling pubmed-45344572015-08-24 Macrophage-Tumor Cell Fusions from Peripheral Blood of Melanoma Patients Clawson, Gary A. Matters, Gail L. Xin, Ping Imamura-Kawasawa, Yuka Du, Zhen Thiboutot, Diane M. Helm, Klaus F. Neves, Rogerio I. Abraham, Thomas PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: While the morbidity and mortality from cancer are largely attributable to its metastatic dissemination, the integral features of the cascade are not well understood. The widely accepted hypothesis is that the primary tumor microenvironment induces the epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition in cancer cells, facilitating their escape into the bloodstream, possibly accompanied by cancer stem cells. An alternative theory for metastasis involves fusion of macrophages with tumor cells (MTFs). Here we culture and characterize apparent MTFs from blood of melanoma patients. METHODS: We isolated enriched CTC populations from peripheral blood samples from melanoma patients, and cultured them. We interrogated these cultured cells for characteristic BRAF mutations, and used confocal microscopy for immunophenotyping, motility, DNA content and chromatin texture analyses, and then conducted xenograft studies using nude mice. FINDINGS: Morphologically, the cultured MTFs were generally large with many pseudopod extensions and lamellipodia. Ultrastructurally, the cultured MTFs appeared to be macrophages. They were rich in mitochondria and lysosomes, as well as apparent melanosomes. The cultured MTF populations were all heterogeneous with regard to DNA content, containing aneuploid and/or high-ploidy cells, and they typically showed large sheets (and/or clumps) of cytoplasmic chromatin. This cytoplasmic DNA was found within heterogeneously-sized autophagic vacuoles, which prominently contained chromatin and micronuclei. Cultured MTFs uniformly expressed pan-macrophage markers (CD14, CD68) and macrophage markers indicative of M2 polarization (CD163, CD204, CD206). They also expressed melanocyte-specific markers (ALCAM, MLANA), epithelial biomarkers (KRT, EpCAM), as well as the pro-carcinogenic cytokine MIF along with functionally related stem cell markers (CXCR4, CD44). MTF cultures from individual patients (5 of 8) contained melanoma-specific BRAF activating mutations. Chromatin texture analysis of deconvoluted images showed condensed DNA (DAPI-intense) regions similar to focal regions described in stem cell fusions. MTFs were readily apparent in vivo in all human melanomas examined, often exhibiting even higher DNA content than the cultured MTFs. When cultured MTFs were transplanted subcutaneously in nude mice, they disseminated and produced metastatic lesions at distant sites. CONCLUSIONS AND HYPOTHESIS: Apparent MTFs are present in peripheral blood of patients with cutaneous melanomas, and they possess the ability to form metastatic lesions when transplanted into mice. We hypothesize that these MTFs arise at the periphery of primary tumors in vivo, that they readily enter the bloodstream and invade distant tissues, secreting cytokines (such as MIF) to prepare “niches” for colonization by metastasis initiating cells. Public Library of Science 2015-08-12 /pmc/articles/PMC4534457/ /pubmed/26267609 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0134320 Text en © 2015 Clawson et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Clawson, Gary A.
Matters, Gail L.
Xin, Ping
Imamura-Kawasawa, Yuka
Du, Zhen
Thiboutot, Diane M.
Helm, Klaus F.
Neves, Rogerio I.
Abraham, Thomas
Macrophage-Tumor Cell Fusions from Peripheral Blood of Melanoma Patients
title Macrophage-Tumor Cell Fusions from Peripheral Blood of Melanoma Patients
title_full Macrophage-Tumor Cell Fusions from Peripheral Blood of Melanoma Patients
title_fullStr Macrophage-Tumor Cell Fusions from Peripheral Blood of Melanoma Patients
title_full_unstemmed Macrophage-Tumor Cell Fusions from Peripheral Blood of Melanoma Patients
title_short Macrophage-Tumor Cell Fusions from Peripheral Blood of Melanoma Patients
title_sort macrophage-tumor cell fusions from peripheral blood of melanoma patients
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4534457/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26267609
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0134320
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