Literature DB >> 12918065

Progression of mouse mammary tumors: MCP-1-TNFalpha cross-regulatory pathway and clonal expression of promalignancy and antimalignancy factors.

Eran Neumark1, Orit Sagi-Assif, Bruria Shalmon, Adit Ben-Baruch, Isaac P Witz.   

Abstract

The progression of breast cancer is affected by multiple cellular and microenvironmental components. The monocyte chemoattractant MCP-1, IL-6 and matrix metalloproteinases (MMP) were suggested to promote, each on its own, breast cancer progression. We recently demonstrated that the high-tumorigenicity phenotype of the DA3 and CSML murine mammary adenocarcinoma cells is correlated with a high expression of MCP-1, IL-6 and MMP. This raised the possibility that common intrinsic tumor-derived factors regulate the concordant expression of these 3 components. The aim of the present study was to gain insight into the mode by which the secretion of MCP-1, IL-6 and MMP from murine mammary adenocarcinoma cells is regulated. This was investigated in cellular clones established from a highly malignant variant of the DA3 tumor (DA3-high). We also determined the secretion of the antimalignancy chemokine IP-10 from these cells. The results indicate that the secretion levels of IL-6, MMP and IP-10 varied between the clones. In contrast, all the clones secreted uniformly high levels of MCP-1, suggesting that MCP-1 constitutes an important feature of the malignancy phenotype of mammary carcinoma. In most of the clones, elevated levels of 1 of the 3 promalignancy factors did not correlate with a high expression of the other 2 factors and vice versa. These findings indicate that the 3 promalignancy factors are not coregulated by a common intrinsic tumor-derived factor. Rather, these results suggest that the individual capacities of the different clones to secrete these factors are summed up in the high-malignancy DA3 parental tumor population, which secretes relatively high levels of MCP-1, IL-6 and MMP as compared to DA3 cells expressing a low-malignancy phenotype. In contrast to the lack of coordinated intrinsic regulation of MCP-1, IL-6 and MMP, it was found that recombinant TNFalpha, a product of tumor-associated macrophages contributing to breast cancer progression, upregulated the secretion of MCP-1, IL-6 and MMP from all the clones. These results suggest a key role for this microenvironmental, monocyte-derived cytokine in the coordinated regulation of these 3 molecules. Furthermore, additional results demonstrated that monocytic cell-derived TNFalpha upregulated MCP-1 secretion from the tumor cells and that MCP-1 in turn promoted the secretion of TNFalpha from monocytic cells. This may result in a positive feedback loop, whereby the tumor cells and the monocytic cells at tumor site promote each other's ability to express and secrete promalignancy factors. We next attempted to assess the contribution of the promalignancy factors MCP-1, IL-6 and MMP and of the antimalignancy factor IP-10 to mammary adenocarcinoma progression. To this end, a preliminary formula was developed in which the net balance between secretion levels of the promalignancy factors and that of the antimalignancy IP-10 chemokine from different clones was related to their in vivo tumorigenicity profile. This formula suggests that a balance between the secretion levels of these factors plays an important role in determining the malignancy phenotype of mammary carcinomas. In all, our findings demonstrate that the mammary tumor cell population is composed of a heterogeneous assortment of clones whose individual characteristics are averaged in the whole population. The malignancy potential of such tumors is thus determined, inter alia, by a combinatorial effect of several promalignancy and antimalignancy factors secreted from each of the clones comprising these tumors. Our results also suggest that the expression of such factors is determined by several nonmutually exclusive regulatory mechanisms. Copyright 2003 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12918065     DOI: 10.1002/ijc.11337

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Cancer        ISSN: 0020-7136            Impact factor:   7.396


  23 in total

1.  Reactive oxygen species mediated calcium oxalate crystal-induced expression of MCP-1 in HK-2 cells.

Authors:  Pouran Habibzadegah-Tari; Karen G Byer; Saeed R Khan
Journal:  Urol Res       Date:  2006-01-06

2.  IL-1β promotes cervical cancer through activating NF-κB/CCL-2.

Authors:  Limin Tao; Sisun Liu; Juying Xiong; Huimin Yang; Yanfang Wu; Anli Xu; Yanfeng Gong
Journal:  Int J Clin Exp Pathol       Date:  2021-04-15

3.  Silencing the hsp25 gene eliminates migration capability of the highly metastatic murine 4T1 breast adenocarcinoma cell.

Authors:  Maria A Bausero; Ajit Bharti; Diana T Page; Kristen D Perez; Jason W-L Eng; Susana L Ordonez; Edwina E Asea; Christian Jantschitsch; Ingela Kindas-Muegge; Daniel Ciocca; Alexzander Asea
Journal:  Tumour Biol       Date:  2005-12-08

4.  Inflammatory factors of the tumor microenvironment induce plasticity in nontransformed breast epithelial cells: EMT, invasion, and collapse of normally organized breast textures.

Authors:  Tal Leibovich-Rivkin; Yulia Liubomirski; Biana Bernstein; Tsipi Meshel; Adit Ben-Baruch
Journal:  Neoplasia       Date:  2013-12       Impact factor: 5.715

5.  Osteoblasts are a major source of inflammatory cytokines in the tumor microenvironment of bone metastatic breast cancer.

Authors:  Karen M Bussard; David J Venzon; Andrea M Mastro
Journal:  J Cell Biochem       Date:  2010-12-01       Impact factor: 4.429

6.  Modeling the effect of tumor size in early breast cancer.

Authors:  Claire Verschraegen; Vincent Vinh-Hung; Gábor Cserni; Richard Gordon; Melanie E Royce; Georges Vlastos; Patricia Tai; Guy Storme
Journal:  Ann Surg       Date:  2005-02       Impact factor: 12.969

7.  Protein Mimetic and Anticancer Properties of Monocyte-Targeting Peptide Amphiphile Micelles.

Authors:  Christopher Poon; Sampreeti Chowdhuri; Cheng-Hsiang Kuo; Yun Fang; Francis J Alenghat; Danielle Hyatt; Kian Kani; Mitchell E Gross; Eun Ji Chung
Journal:  ACS Biomater Sci Eng       Date:  2017-09-28

8.  Stromal adipocyte enhancer-binding protein (AEBP1) promotes mammary epithelial cell hyperplasia via proinflammatory and hedgehog signaling.

Authors:  Ryan W Holloway; Oleg Bogachev; Alamelu G Bharadwaj; Greg D McCluskey; Amin F Majdalawieh; Lei Zhang; Hyo-Sung Ro
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2012-09-20       Impact factor: 5.157

9.  The Tumor-Promoting Flow of Cells Into, Within and Out of the Tumor Site: Regulation by the Inflammatory Axis of TNFα and Chemokines.

Authors:  Adit Ben-Baruch
Journal:  Cancer Microenviron       Date:  2011-12-22

Review 10.  Mesenchymal stem cell secretome and regenerative therapy after cancer.

Authors:  Ludovic Zimmerlin; Tea Soon Park; Elias T Zambidis; Vera S Donnenberg; Albert D Donnenberg
Journal:  Biochimie       Date:  2013-06-05       Impact factor: 4.079

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