| Literature DB >> 24404146 |
Magdalena Król1, Joanna Mucha1, Kinga Majchrzak2, Agata Homa1, Małgorzata Bulkowska1, Alicja Majewska1, Małgorzata Gajewska1, Marta Pietrzak1, Mikołaj Perszko1, Karolina Romanowska1, Karol Pawłowski3, Elisabetta Manuali4, Eva Hellmen5, Tomasz Motyl1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: According to the current hypothesis, tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) are "corrupted" by cancer cells and subsequently facilitate, rather than inhibit, tumor metastasis. Because the molecular mechanisms of cancer cell-TAM interactions are complicated and controversial we aimed to better define this phenomenon. METHODS ANDEntities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24404146 PMCID: PMC3880277 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0083995
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Primer's sequences used in this study and their annealing optimal temperature and time.
| Gene name | Left Primer | Right Primer | Annealing temp | Annealing time |
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| 60 | 4 |
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| 61 | 6 |
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| 61 | 6 |
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| 61 | 8 |
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| 60 | 4 |
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| 60 | 6 |
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| 61 | 8 |
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| 60 | 9 |
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| 60 | 10 |
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| 61 | 6 |
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| 60 | 8 |
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| 60 | 6 |
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| 60 | 4 |
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| 61 | 10 |
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| 60 | 6 |
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| 61 | 6 |
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| 61 | 10 |
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| 61 | 10 |
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| 59 | 6 |
The mRNA sequences of key genes were obtained from NCBI database. Primers were designed using PRIMER3 software (free on-line access) and checked using Oligo Calculator (free on-line access) and Primer-Blast (NCBI database).
The list of Wnt-targeting miRNAs regulated in canine mammary cancer cell lines and macrophages grown as a co-culture. Table is based on microarray data and miRBase.
| Wnt target gene | miRNA regulated in cancer cells grown with macrophages | miRNA regulated in macrophages grown with cancer cells | ||
| up | down | up | down | |
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| miR-124, miR-137, miR-212, miR-377 | miR-141 | miR-128 | |
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| miR-15a | miR-183 | miR-103, miR-107, miR-221, miR-222, miR-301a, miR-340 | |
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| miR-495 | miR-219 | ||
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| miR-144 | miR-24 | miR-101, miR-30e | |
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| miR-181b | miR-181d | miR-30b | |
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| miR-150, miR-214, miR-219, miR-382, miR-496, miR-543 | miR-181d | miR-320 | |
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| miR-219 | miR-219 | ||
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| miR-346 | |||
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| miR-202, miR-377 | let-7a, let-7b, miR-183 | let-7b, let-7c, miR-194, miR-27a, miR-27b, miR-497 | |
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| miR-183 | miR-140, miR-33a | ||
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| miR-133a, miR-133b, miR-181d | miR-135b | miR-141, miR-200c | miR-148a, miR-148b, miR-181a, miR-186, miR-505 |
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| miR-139, miR-217 | miR-130a | ||
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| miR-217 | miR-24 | miR-24, miR-30c | |
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| miR-136 | miR-135b, miR-24, miR-33b | miR-19b, miR-21, miR-210, miR-324, miR-542 | |
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| miR-133a, miR-181d, miR-376c | miR-130a, miR-151, miR-24 | miR-130a, miR-365 | miR-151, miR-181d, miR-195, miR-24, miR-26a, miR-30e, miR-362, miR-374a, miR-374b, miR-425, miR-497, miR-551b |
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| miR-181b, miR-212, miR-31 | miR-23a, miR-24 | miR-126, miR-140, miR-146b, miR-181a, miR-185, miR-31, miR-324 | |
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| miR-153, miR-153, miR-181b, miR-31 | miR-183 | miR-146a, miR-181a, miR-22, miR-221, miR-26a, miR-27b, miR-301a, miR-30c, miR-31, miR-32, miR-324, miR-361 | |
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| miR-127, miR-369 | miR-186, miR-195, miR-27b, miR-30c, miR-33a | ||
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| miR-133b, miR-145 | let-7c | ||
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| miR-185, miR-210 | |||
The area of the analyses covered in this publication has been deposited in NCBI's Gene Expression Omnibus and is accessible via GEO Series accession number GSE43968.
Figure 1Expression of selected Wnt genes in co-cultured canine mammary tumor cells and macrophages.
Real-time RT-PCR analysis of Wnt genes in co-cultured and monocultured canine mammary neoplastic cells and macrophages. (A) Representative agarose gel electrophoresis of Cd163 and Mmp9 PCR products following real-time SYBR Green amplification in macrophages cultured alone and in co-culture with neoplastic cells. (B) Representative agarose gel electrophoresis of PCR products following real-time SYBR Green amplification (CA, cancer cells grown as monoculture; CA+MQ, co-cultured cancer cells; MQ, mono-cultured macrophages; and MQ+CA, macrophages co-cultured with cancer cells). (C) Fold changes in examined genes in co-cultured macrophages compared with control macrophages. (D) Western blots of cytoplasmic and membrane Wnt proteins from Macrophages grown as monocultures or sorted from co-culture with canine mammary neoplastic cells. The level of examined proteins (E, F, G) was expressed as IOD (Integrated Optical Density) in arbitrary units with the value obtained using the Odyssey Infrared Imaging System (LI-COR Inc., USA). The results are expressed as the mean ±SD. The ANOVA + Tukey post-hoc test were applied (Graph Pad v. 5.0), the values differed significantly (p<0.05) were marked as *, whereas values differed highly significant (p<0.01 or p<0.001) were marked as ** or ***, respectively.
Figure 2Expression of Wnt proteins in co-cultured canine mammary tumor cells and macrophages.
Fold changes of Wnt genes in CMT-U27, CMT-U309, and P114 canine mammary neoplastic cells cultured in macrophage-conditioned medium or co-cultured with macrophages compared with control cells (A). Analysis of variance and Tukey's test were applied (GraphPad Prism 5.0, USA); the Differences were considered significant when *p<0.05 and highly significant when **p<0.001. Western blots of cytoplasmic and membrane or nuclear (B) Wnt proteins from CMT-U27, CMT-U309, and P114 canine mammary neoplastic cells grown in control medium, macrophage-conditioned medium, or in co-culture with macrophages. (C) Neoplastic cell survival (MTT assays) in control media, macrophage-conditioned medium (CM) and in co-culture with macrophages (MQ).
The β-catenin staining pattern, number of tumor associated macrophages (TAMs) and expression (IOD, Integrated Optical Density) of Wnt-2, Wnt-5a, Dkk-1 and ROR-2 in canine mammary metastatic and non-metastatic tumors.
| B-catenin staining pattern | metastatic tumors | non-metastatic tumors |
| Nucear | N = 5 | |
| nucelear+cytoplasmic | N = 13 | |
| nucear+cytoplasmic+membranous | N = 5 | |
| cytoplasmic+membranous | N = 2 | N = 2 |
| cytoplasmic | N = 23 | |
| Number of TAMs | 115 (±10) | 80 (±8) |
| IOD of Wnt-2 | 550,000 (±8,663) | 181,750 (±120,550) |
| IOD of Wnt-5a | 511,300 (±201,236) | 109,284 (±5,352) |
| IOD of Dkk-1 | 174,456 (±50,231) | 85,053 (±31,837) |
| IOD of ROR-2 | 516,667 (±125,831) | 233,333 (±76,376) |
Figure 3Growth characteristic on the Matrigel matrix.
Phase contrast micrographs of CMT-U27, CMT-U309, and P114 cells grown on the Matrigel matrix for 72 h under control conditions or in macrophage-conditioned medium. Control neoplastic cells formed colonies, whereas those treated with macrophage-conditioned medium invaded the Matrigel matrix and formed branches.
Figure 4Confocal and immunohistochemical analysis of canine mammary tumor cell lines grown in co-culture with macrophages.
Confocal images show expression, distribution, and co-localization of actin and p-FSCN1 and formation of stress fibers in control (A), conditioned medium-treated (B), and co-cultured (C) CMT-U27 canine mammary cancer cells. Graph (D) and representative pictures (E) of cytokeratin and vimentin expression in control canine mammary cancer cells (CMT-U27) and after culture in macrophage-conditioned medium (MC-medium) or co-culture with macrophages. Monocultured neoplastic cells showed strong cytokeratin expression and weak vimentin expression. Cytokeratin expression was significantly weaker due to culture in macrophage-conditioned medium or co-culture with macrophages. On the other hand, vimentin expression was found to be significantly stronger due to neoplastic cell culture in macrophage-conditioned medium or co-cultured with macrophages. Cytokeratin (CK) and vimentin (VIM) expression was examined in control macrophages (F; graph and representative pictures). They showed no expression of cytokeratin whereas they showed vimentin expression at the same level as neoplastic cells grown in macrophage-conditioned medium (no significant difference). Images were generated using an Olympus BX60 microscope (200×); Cytokeratin and vimentin are indicated by brown precipitates.
Figure 5Analysis of β-catenin localization and macrophage numbers in metastatic and non-metastatic canine mammary cancer tissues.
Images of canine mammary metastatic and non-metastatic tumors were obtained using an Olympus BX60 microscope (400×). Tissue sections were treated with specific anti-β-catenin and anti-MAC387 antibodies and stained using an Envision kit (Dako, Denmark). Labeled antigens are indicated by brown precipitates. Cytoplasmic and membrane-bound β-catenin is observed in metastatic tumor cells, whereas nuclear β-catenin is prevalent in non-metastatic tumor cells (indicated as asterix). Macrophage infiltration is much greater in metastatic tumors than in non-metastatic tumors. The colorimetric intensities of 10–20 images of immunohistochemical-stained antigen spots were counted using a computer-assisted image analyzer (Olympus Microimage™ Image Analysis version 4.0 software for Windows, USA) and were expressed as mean pixel integrated optical density (IOD). Statistical analysis was performed using Prism version 5.00 software (GraphPad Software, USA). Analysis of variance and Tukey's post-hoc tests were applied to identify significant differences in optical density between cell lines. Differences were considered significant when *p<0.05 and highly significant when **p≤0.01 or ***p≤0.001. Spearman's coefficient was used to assess correlations.
Figure 6Analysis of Wnt proteins expression in metastatic and non-metastatic canine mammary cancer tissues.
Images showing Wnt-2, Wnt-5a, Dkk-1, and ROR-2 expression in metastatic and non-metastatic canine mammary tumors were obtained using an Olympus BX60 microscope (400×). Tissue sections were treated with specific antibodies and stained using an EnVision kit (Dako, Denmark). Labeled antigens are indicated by brown precipitates. Metastatic tumors show significantly higher expression of all examined antigens compared with non-metastatic tumors. Colorimetric intensities of immunohistochemical-stained antigen spots on 10–20 images were counted using a computer-assisted image analyzer (Olympus Microimage™ Image Analysis version 4.0 software for Windows, USA) and were expressed as mean pixel integrated optical density (IOD). Statistical analysis was performed using Prism version 5.00 software (GraphPad Software, USA). Analysis of variance and Tukey's post-hoc tests were used to identify differences in optical density. Differences were considered significant when *p<0.05, and highly significant when **p≤0.01 or ***p≤0.001.
Figure 7Canonical and non-canonical Wnt pathways.
Scheme of the interactions observed between canonical and non-canonical Wnt pathways.