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Characterization of increasing stages of invasiveness identifies stromal/cancer cell crosstalk in rat models of mesothelioma

Sarcomatoid mesothelioma (SM) is a devastating cancer associated with one of the poorest outcome. Therefore, representative preclinical models reproducing different tumor microenvironments (TME) observed in patients would open up new prospects for the identification of markers and evaluation of inno...

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Autores principales: Nader, Joëlle S., Abadie, Jérôme, Deshayes, Sophie, Boissard, Alice, Blandin, Stéphanie, Blanquart, Christophe, Boisgerault, Nicolas, Coqueret, Olivier, Guette, Catherine, Grégoire, Marc, Pouliquen, Daniel L.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5893242/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29662647
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.24632
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author Nader, Joëlle S.
Abadie, Jérôme
Deshayes, Sophie
Boissard, Alice
Blandin, Stéphanie
Blanquart, Christophe
Boisgerault, Nicolas
Coqueret, Olivier
Guette, Catherine
Grégoire, Marc
Pouliquen, Daniel L.
author_facet Nader, Joëlle S.
Abadie, Jérôme
Deshayes, Sophie
Boissard, Alice
Blandin, Stéphanie
Blanquart, Christophe
Boisgerault, Nicolas
Coqueret, Olivier
Guette, Catherine
Grégoire, Marc
Pouliquen, Daniel L.
author_sort Nader, Joëlle S.
collection PubMed
description Sarcomatoid mesothelioma (SM) is a devastating cancer associated with one of the poorest outcome. Therefore, representative preclinical models reproducing different tumor microenvironments (TME) observed in patients would open up new prospects for the identification of markers and evaluation of innovative therapies. Histological analyses of four original models of rat SM revealed their increasing infiltrative and metastatic potential were associated with differences in Ki67 index, blood-vessel density, and T-lymphocyte and macrophage infiltration. In comparison with the noninvasive tumor M5-T2, proteomic analysis demonstrated the three invasive tumors F4-T2, F5-T1 and M5-T1 shared in common a very significant increase in the abundance of the multifunctional proteins galectin-3, prohibitin and annexin A5, and a decrease in proteins involved in cell adhesion, tumor suppression, or epithelial differentiation. The increased metastatic potential of the F5-T1 tumor, relative to F4-T2, was associated with an increased macrophage vs T-cell infiltrate, changes in the levels of expression of a panel of cytokine genes, an increased content of proteins involved in chromatin organization, ribosome structure, splicing, or presenting anti-adhesive properties, and a decreased content of proteins involved in protection against oxidative stress, normoxia and intracellular trafficking. The most invasive tumor, M5-T1, was characterized by a pattern of specific phenotypic and molecular features affecting the presentation of MHC class I-mediated antigens and immune cell infiltration, or involved in the reorganization of the cytoskeleton and composition of the extracellular matrix. These four preclinical models and data represent a new resource available to the cancer research community to catalyze further investigations on invasiveness.
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spelling pubmed-58932422018-04-16 Characterization of increasing stages of invasiveness identifies stromal/cancer cell crosstalk in rat models of mesothelioma Nader, Joëlle S. Abadie, Jérôme Deshayes, Sophie Boissard, Alice Blandin, Stéphanie Blanquart, Christophe Boisgerault, Nicolas Coqueret, Olivier Guette, Catherine Grégoire, Marc Pouliquen, Daniel L. Oncotarget Research Paper Sarcomatoid mesothelioma (SM) is a devastating cancer associated with one of the poorest outcome. Therefore, representative preclinical models reproducing different tumor microenvironments (TME) observed in patients would open up new prospects for the identification of markers and evaluation of innovative therapies. Histological analyses of four original models of rat SM revealed their increasing infiltrative and metastatic potential were associated with differences in Ki67 index, blood-vessel density, and T-lymphocyte and macrophage infiltration. In comparison with the noninvasive tumor M5-T2, proteomic analysis demonstrated the three invasive tumors F4-T2, F5-T1 and M5-T1 shared in common a very significant increase in the abundance of the multifunctional proteins galectin-3, prohibitin and annexin A5, and a decrease in proteins involved in cell adhesion, tumor suppression, or epithelial differentiation. The increased metastatic potential of the F5-T1 tumor, relative to F4-T2, was associated with an increased macrophage vs T-cell infiltrate, changes in the levels of expression of a panel of cytokine genes, an increased content of proteins involved in chromatin organization, ribosome structure, splicing, or presenting anti-adhesive properties, and a decreased content of proteins involved in protection against oxidative stress, normoxia and intracellular trafficking. The most invasive tumor, M5-T1, was characterized by a pattern of specific phenotypic and molecular features affecting the presentation of MHC class I-mediated antigens and immune cell infiltration, or involved in the reorganization of the cytoskeleton and composition of the extracellular matrix. These four preclinical models and data represent a new resource available to the cancer research community to catalyze further investigations on invasiveness. Impact Journals LLC 2018-03-27 /pmc/articles/PMC5893242/ /pubmed/29662647 http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.24632 Text en Copyright: © 2018 Nader 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
Nader, Joëlle S.
Abadie, Jérôme
Deshayes, Sophie
Boissard, Alice
Blandin, Stéphanie
Blanquart, Christophe
Boisgerault, Nicolas
Coqueret, Olivier
Guette, Catherine
Grégoire, Marc
Pouliquen, Daniel L.
Characterization of increasing stages of invasiveness identifies stromal/cancer cell crosstalk in rat models of mesothelioma
title Characterization of increasing stages of invasiveness identifies stromal/cancer cell crosstalk in rat models of mesothelioma
title_full Characterization of increasing stages of invasiveness identifies stromal/cancer cell crosstalk in rat models of mesothelioma
title_fullStr Characterization of increasing stages of invasiveness identifies stromal/cancer cell crosstalk in rat models of mesothelioma
title_full_unstemmed Characterization of increasing stages of invasiveness identifies stromal/cancer cell crosstalk in rat models of mesothelioma
title_short Characterization of increasing stages of invasiveness identifies stromal/cancer cell crosstalk in rat models of mesothelioma
title_sort characterization of increasing stages of invasiveness identifies stromal/cancer cell crosstalk in rat models of mesothelioma
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5893242/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29662647
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.24632
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