| Literature DB >> 26668367 |
Tina El Rayes1, Raúl Catena1, Sharrell Lee2, Marcin Stawowczyk1, Natasha Joshi1, Claudia Fischbach3, Charles A Powell4, Andrew J Dannenberg5, Nasser K Altorki2, Dingcheng Gao1, Vivek Mittal6.
Abstract
Inflammation is inextricably associated with primary tumor progression. However, the contribution of inflammation to tumor outgrowth in metastatic organs has remained underexplored. Here, we show that extrinsic inflammation in the lungs leads to the recruitment of bone marrow-derived neutrophils, which degranulate azurophilic granules to release the Ser proteases, elastase and cathepsin G, resulting in the proteolytic destruction of the antitumorigenic factor thrombospondin-1 (Tsp-1). Genetic ablation of these neutrophil proteases protected Tsp-1 from degradation and suppressed lung metastasis. These results provide mechanistic insights into the contribution of inflammatory neutrophils to metastasis and highlight the unique neutrophil protease-Tsp-1 axis as a potential antimetastatic therapeutic target.Entities:
Keywords: inflammation; metastasis; neutrophils; proteases; thrombospondin-1
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26668367 PMCID: PMC4703007 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1507294112
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205