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Human breast adipose tissue: characterization of factors that change during tumor progression in human breast cancer

BACKGROUND: Adipose microenvironment is involved in signaling pathways that influence breast cancer. We aim to characterize factors that are modified: 1) in tumor and non tumor human breast epithelial cell lines when incubated with conditioned media (CMs) from human breast cancer adipose tissue expl...

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Autores principales: Fletcher, Sabrina Johanna, Sacca, Paula Alejandra, Pistone-Creydt, Mercedes, Coló, Federico Andrés, Serra, María Florencia, Santino, Flavia Eliana, Sasso, Corina Verónica, Lopez-Fontana, Constanza Matilde, Carón, Rubén Walter, Calvo, Juan Carlos, Pistone-Creydt, Virginia
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5297209/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28173833
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13046-017-0494-4
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author Fletcher, Sabrina Johanna
Sacca, Paula Alejandra
Pistone-Creydt, Mercedes
Coló, Federico Andrés
Serra, María Florencia
Santino, Flavia Eliana
Sasso, Corina Verónica
Lopez-Fontana, Constanza Matilde
Carón, Rubén Walter
Calvo, Juan Carlos
Pistone-Creydt, Virginia
author_facet Fletcher, Sabrina Johanna
Sacca, Paula Alejandra
Pistone-Creydt, Mercedes
Coló, Federico Andrés
Serra, María Florencia
Santino, Flavia Eliana
Sasso, Corina Verónica
Lopez-Fontana, Constanza Matilde
Carón, Rubén Walter
Calvo, Juan Carlos
Pistone-Creydt, Virginia
author_sort Fletcher, Sabrina Johanna
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Adipose microenvironment is involved in signaling pathways that influence breast cancer. We aim to characterize factors that are modified: 1) in tumor and non tumor human breast epithelial cell lines when incubated with conditioned media (CMs) from human breast cancer adipose tissue explants (hATT) or normal breast adipose tissue explants (hATN); 2) in hATN-CMs vs hATT-CMs; 3) in the tumor associated adipocytes vs. non tumor associated adipocytes. METHODS: We used hATN or hATT- CMs on tumor and non-tumor breast cancer cell lines. We evaluated changes in versican, CD44, ADAMTS1 and Adipo R1 expression on cell lines or in the different CMs. In addition we evaluated changes in the morphology and expression of these factors in slices of the different adipose tissues. The statistical significance between different experimental conditions was evaluated by one-way ANOVA. Tukey’s post-hoc tests were performed within each individual treatment. RESULTS: hATT-CMs increase versican, CD44, ADAMTS1 and Adipo R1 expression in breast cancer epithelial cells. Furthermore, hATT-CMs present higher levels of versican expression compared to hATN-CMs. In addition, we observed a loss of effect in cellular migration when we pre-incubated hATT-CMs with chondroitinase ABC, which cleaves GAGs chains bound to the versican core protein, thus losing the ability to bind to CD44. Adipocytes associated with the invasive front are reduced in size compared to adipocytes that are farther away. Also, hATT adipocytes express significantly higher amounts of versican, CD44 and Adipo R1, and significantly lower amounts of adiponectin and perilipin, unlike hATN adipocytes. CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that hATT secrete a different set of proteins compared to hATN. Furthermore, versican, a proteoglycan that is overexpressed in hATT-CMs compared to hATN-CMs, might be involved in the tumorogenic behavior observed in both cell lines employed. In addition, we may conclude that adipocytes from the tumor microenvironment show a less differentiated state than adipocytes from normal microenvironment. This would indicate a loss of normal functions in mature adipocytes (such as energy storage), in support of others that might favor tumor growth.
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spelling pubmed-52972092017-02-10 Human breast adipose tissue: characterization of factors that change during tumor progression in human breast cancer Fletcher, Sabrina Johanna Sacca, Paula Alejandra Pistone-Creydt, Mercedes Coló, Federico Andrés Serra, María Florencia Santino, Flavia Eliana Sasso, Corina Verónica Lopez-Fontana, Constanza Matilde Carón, Rubén Walter Calvo, Juan Carlos Pistone-Creydt, Virginia J Exp Clin Cancer Res Research BACKGROUND: Adipose microenvironment is involved in signaling pathways that influence breast cancer. We aim to characterize factors that are modified: 1) in tumor and non tumor human breast epithelial cell lines when incubated with conditioned media (CMs) from human breast cancer adipose tissue explants (hATT) or normal breast adipose tissue explants (hATN); 2) in hATN-CMs vs hATT-CMs; 3) in the tumor associated adipocytes vs. non tumor associated adipocytes. METHODS: We used hATN or hATT- CMs on tumor and non-tumor breast cancer cell lines. We evaluated changes in versican, CD44, ADAMTS1 and Adipo R1 expression on cell lines or in the different CMs. In addition we evaluated changes in the morphology and expression of these factors in slices of the different adipose tissues. The statistical significance between different experimental conditions was evaluated by one-way ANOVA. Tukey’s post-hoc tests were performed within each individual treatment. RESULTS: hATT-CMs increase versican, CD44, ADAMTS1 and Adipo R1 expression in breast cancer epithelial cells. Furthermore, hATT-CMs present higher levels of versican expression compared to hATN-CMs. In addition, we observed a loss of effect in cellular migration when we pre-incubated hATT-CMs with chondroitinase ABC, which cleaves GAGs chains bound to the versican core protein, thus losing the ability to bind to CD44. Adipocytes associated with the invasive front are reduced in size compared to adipocytes that are farther away. Also, hATT adipocytes express significantly higher amounts of versican, CD44 and Adipo R1, and significantly lower amounts of adiponectin and perilipin, unlike hATN adipocytes. CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that hATT secrete a different set of proteins compared to hATN. Furthermore, versican, a proteoglycan that is overexpressed in hATT-CMs compared to hATN-CMs, might be involved in the tumorogenic behavior observed in both cell lines employed. In addition, we may conclude that adipocytes from the tumor microenvironment show a less differentiated state than adipocytes from normal microenvironment. This would indicate a loss of normal functions in mature adipocytes (such as energy storage), in support of others that might favor tumor growth. BioMed Central 2017-02-07 /pmc/articles/PMC5297209/ /pubmed/28173833 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13046-017-0494-4 Text en © The Author(s). 2017 Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Research
Fletcher, Sabrina Johanna
Sacca, Paula Alejandra
Pistone-Creydt, Mercedes
Coló, Federico Andrés
Serra, María Florencia
Santino, Flavia Eliana
Sasso, Corina Verónica
Lopez-Fontana, Constanza Matilde
Carón, Rubén Walter
Calvo, Juan Carlos
Pistone-Creydt, Virginia
Human breast adipose tissue: characterization of factors that change during tumor progression in human breast cancer
title Human breast adipose tissue: characterization of factors that change during tumor progression in human breast cancer
title_full Human breast adipose tissue: characterization of factors that change during tumor progression in human breast cancer
title_fullStr Human breast adipose tissue: characterization of factors that change during tumor progression in human breast cancer
title_full_unstemmed Human breast adipose tissue: characterization of factors that change during tumor progression in human breast cancer
title_short Human breast adipose tissue: characterization of factors that change during tumor progression in human breast cancer
title_sort human breast adipose tissue: characterization of factors that change during tumor progression in human breast cancer
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5297209/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28173833
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13046-017-0494-4
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