Cargando…

Loss of neutrophil polarization in colon carcinoma liver metastases of mice with an inducible, liver-specific IGF-I deficiency

The growth of cancer metastases in the liver depends on a permissive interaction with the hepatic microenvironment and neutrophils can contribute to this interaction, either positively or negatively, depending on their phenotype. Here we investigated the role of IGF-I in the control of the tumor mic...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Rayes, Roni F., Milette, Simon, Fernandez, Maria Celia, Ham, Boram, Wang, Ni, Bourdeau, France, Perrino, Stephanie, Yakar, Shoshana, Brodt, Pnina
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5884657/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29644002
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.24593
_version_ 1783311859428884480
author Rayes, Roni F.
Milette, Simon
Fernandez, Maria Celia
Ham, Boram
Wang, Ni
Bourdeau, France
Perrino, Stephanie
Yakar, Shoshana
Brodt, Pnina
author_facet Rayes, Roni F.
Milette, Simon
Fernandez, Maria Celia
Ham, Boram
Wang, Ni
Bourdeau, France
Perrino, Stephanie
Yakar, Shoshana
Brodt, Pnina
author_sort Rayes, Roni F.
collection PubMed
description The growth of cancer metastases in the liver depends on a permissive interaction with the hepatic microenvironment and neutrophils can contribute to this interaction, either positively or negatively, depending on their phenotype. Here we investigated the role of IGF-I in the control of the tumor microenvironment in the liver, using mice with a conditional, liver-specific, IGF-I deficiency (iLID) induced by a single tamoxifen injection. In mice that had a sustained (3 weeks) IGF-I deficiency prior to the intrasplenic/portal inoculation of colon carcinoma MC-38 cells, we observed an increase in neutrophil accumulation in the liver relative to controls. However, unlike controls, these neutrophils did not acquire the (anti-inflammatory) tumor-promoting phenotype, as evidenced by retention of high ICAM-1 expression and nitric oxide production and low CXCR4, CCL5, and VEGF expression and arginase production, all characteristic of the (pro-inflammatory) phenotype. This coincided with an increase in apoptotic tumor cells and reduced metastasis. Neutrophils isolated from these mice also had reduced IGF-IR expression levels. These changes were not observed in iLID mice with a short-term (2 days) IGF-I depletion, despite a 70% reduction in their circulating IGF-I levels, indicating that a sustained IGF-I deficiency was necessary to alter the neutrophil phenotype. Similar results were obtained with the highly metastatic Lewis lung carcinoma subline H-59 cells and in mice injected with an IGF-Trap that blocks IGF-IR signaling by reducing ligand bioavailability. Our results implicate the IGF axis in neutrophil polarization and the induction of a pro-metastatic microenvironment in the liver.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-5884657
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2018
publisher Impact Journals LLC
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-58846572018-04-11 Loss of neutrophil polarization in colon carcinoma liver metastases of mice with an inducible, liver-specific IGF-I deficiency Rayes, Roni F. Milette, Simon Fernandez, Maria Celia Ham, Boram Wang, Ni Bourdeau, France Perrino, Stephanie Yakar, Shoshana Brodt, Pnina Oncotarget Research Paper The growth of cancer metastases in the liver depends on a permissive interaction with the hepatic microenvironment and neutrophils can contribute to this interaction, either positively or negatively, depending on their phenotype. Here we investigated the role of IGF-I in the control of the tumor microenvironment in the liver, using mice with a conditional, liver-specific, IGF-I deficiency (iLID) induced by a single tamoxifen injection. In mice that had a sustained (3 weeks) IGF-I deficiency prior to the intrasplenic/portal inoculation of colon carcinoma MC-38 cells, we observed an increase in neutrophil accumulation in the liver relative to controls. However, unlike controls, these neutrophils did not acquire the (anti-inflammatory) tumor-promoting phenotype, as evidenced by retention of high ICAM-1 expression and nitric oxide production and low CXCR4, CCL5, and VEGF expression and arginase production, all characteristic of the (pro-inflammatory) phenotype. This coincided with an increase in apoptotic tumor cells and reduced metastasis. Neutrophils isolated from these mice also had reduced IGF-IR expression levels. These changes were not observed in iLID mice with a short-term (2 days) IGF-I depletion, despite a 70% reduction in their circulating IGF-I levels, indicating that a sustained IGF-I deficiency was necessary to alter the neutrophil phenotype. Similar results were obtained with the highly metastatic Lewis lung carcinoma subline H-59 cells and in mice injected with an IGF-Trap that blocks IGF-IR signaling by reducing ligand bioavailability. Our results implicate the IGF axis in neutrophil polarization and the induction of a pro-metastatic microenvironment in the liver. Impact Journals LLC 2018-02-28 /pmc/articles/PMC5884657/ /pubmed/29644002 http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.24593 Text en Copyright: © 2018 Rayes et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/) 3.0 (CC BY 3.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Rayes, Roni F.
Milette, Simon
Fernandez, Maria Celia
Ham, Boram
Wang, Ni
Bourdeau, France
Perrino, Stephanie
Yakar, Shoshana
Brodt, Pnina
Loss of neutrophil polarization in colon carcinoma liver metastases of mice with an inducible, liver-specific IGF-I deficiency
title Loss of neutrophil polarization in colon carcinoma liver metastases of mice with an inducible, liver-specific IGF-I deficiency
title_full Loss of neutrophil polarization in colon carcinoma liver metastases of mice with an inducible, liver-specific IGF-I deficiency
title_fullStr Loss of neutrophil polarization in colon carcinoma liver metastases of mice with an inducible, liver-specific IGF-I deficiency
title_full_unstemmed Loss of neutrophil polarization in colon carcinoma liver metastases of mice with an inducible, liver-specific IGF-I deficiency
title_short Loss of neutrophil polarization in colon carcinoma liver metastases of mice with an inducible, liver-specific IGF-I deficiency
title_sort loss of neutrophil polarization in colon carcinoma liver metastases of mice with an inducible, liver-specific igf-i deficiency
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5884657/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29644002
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.24593
work_keys_str_mv AT rayesronif lossofneutrophilpolarizationincoloncarcinomalivermetastasesofmicewithaninducibleliverspecificigfideficiency
AT milettesimon lossofneutrophilpolarizationincoloncarcinomalivermetastasesofmicewithaninducibleliverspecificigfideficiency
AT fernandezmariacelia lossofneutrophilpolarizationincoloncarcinomalivermetastasesofmicewithaninducibleliverspecificigfideficiency
AT hamboram lossofneutrophilpolarizationincoloncarcinomalivermetastasesofmicewithaninducibleliverspecificigfideficiency
AT wangni lossofneutrophilpolarizationincoloncarcinomalivermetastasesofmicewithaninducibleliverspecificigfideficiency
AT bourdeaufrance lossofneutrophilpolarizationincoloncarcinomalivermetastasesofmicewithaninducibleliverspecificigfideficiency
AT perrinostephanie lossofneutrophilpolarizationincoloncarcinomalivermetastasesofmicewithaninducibleliverspecificigfideficiency
AT yakarshoshana lossofneutrophilpolarizationincoloncarcinomalivermetastasesofmicewithaninducibleliverspecificigfideficiency
AT brodtpnina lossofneutrophilpolarizationincoloncarcinomalivermetastasesofmicewithaninducibleliverspecificigfideficiency