| Literature DB >> 29651440 |
Angélica Aponte-López1,2, Ezequiel M Fuentes-Pananá1, Daniel Cortes-Muñoz3, Samira Muñoz-Cruz4.
Abstract
Mast cells are unique tissue-resident immune cells that secrete a diverse array of biologically active compounds that can stimulate, modulate, or suppress the immune response. Although mounting evidence supports that mast cells are consistently infiltrating tumors, their role as either a driving or an opposite force for cancer progression is still controversial. Particularly, in breast cancer, their function is still under discussion. While some studies have shown a protective role, recent evidence indicates that mast cells enhance blood and lymphatic vessel formation. Interestingly, one of the most important components of the mast cell cargo, the serine protease tryptase, is a potent angiogenic factor, and elevated serum tryptase levels correlate with bad prognosis in breast cancer patients. Likewise, histamine is known to induce tumor cell proliferation and tumor growth. In agreement, mast cell depletion reduces the size of mammary tumors and metastasis in murine models that spontaneously develop breast cancer. In this review, we will discuss the evidence supporting protumoral and antitumoral roles of mast cells, emphasizing recent findings placing mast cells as important drivers of tumor progression, as well as the potential use of these cells or their mediators as therapeutic targets.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29651440 PMCID: PMC5832101 DOI: 10.1155/2018/2584243
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol Res ISSN: 2314-7156 Impact factor: 4.818
Figure 1Overview of mast cell development, heterogeneity, and activation. Mast cells arise in the bone marrow from hematopoietic stem cells (HSC) via a multipotent progenitor (MPP), which can become a mast cell-committed progenitor (MCP) that exits the bone marrow and migrates to peripheral tissues to complete maturation. Several pathways have been described for murine and human mast cell origin. In mice, MCPs may be derived directly from MPPs or from common myeloid progenitors (CMP). Mast cells may also be derived from the granulocyte/monocyte progenitor (GMP) via an intermediate progenitor (BMCP), identified only in the spleen of C57BL6 mice, which gives rise to basophils and mast cells. In humans, it has been postulated that mast cells originate from a yet unidentified uncommitted progenitor that gives rise to a mast cell/monocyte-committed progenitor (MC/MP) in bone marrow. Alternatively, an MCP population that gives rise exclusively to mast cells has recently been identified in blood. Final differentiation occurs in peripheral tissues, where microenvironmental factors determine the phenotype of the mature mast cells. Mast cells exhibit marked phenotypic and functional heterogeneity. Two major subtypes have been described in both rodents and humans, in the former as mucosal and connective tissue mast cells and in the latter as tryptase- and chymase-rich mast cells (MCTC) and those that mainly contain tryptase (MCT). The right end diagram illustrates the distinct classes of bioactive molecules and their temporality of release upon mast cell activation in tissues. See text for a more detailed explanation.
Studies analyzing the participation of mast cells in breast cancer.
| Study type | BC specimen | MC detection method | Prognosis in BC | Association | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| D/C/E | Tumor tissue and blood ∗xenotransplanted mice | Tryptase | Positive | Decreased blood clotting and hypoxia | [ |
| D/C | Tumor tissue | c-kit (CD117) | Positive | Greater survival | [ |
| D/C | Tumor tissue from IDC | c-kit (CD117) | Positive | Greater survival | [ |
| D/C | Tumor tissue | Giemsa and Alcian blue | Positive | BC subtype | [ |
| D/C | Lymph nodes | Toluidine blue | Positive | Greater survival | [ |
| D/C | Tumor tissue from IDC | Tryptase and chymase | Positive | BC subtypes | [ |
| D/C | Sentinel lymph nodes | Tryptase | Negative | Angiogenesis and micrometastasis | [ |
| D/C | Tumor tissue | Tryptase | Negative | Angiogenesis | [ |
| D/C | Tumor tissue and sera to measure tryptase levels | Tryptase | Negative | Angiogenesis | [ |
| D/C | Tumor tissue and lymph nodes from IDC patients | Toluidine blue | Negative | Angiogenesis | [ |
| D/C | Tumor tissue from IDC | Toluidine blue | Negative | BC grade | [ |
| D/C/E | Benign growths and tumor tissues | Tryptase | Negative | BC grade and metastasis | [ |
| E | ∗Mast cell-deficient BC-prone mice | Toluidine blue | Negative | Progression, metastasis, and angiogenesis | [ |
| C/E | Tumor tissue from cimetidine treated patients | Toluidine blue | None | None | [ |
BC: breast cancer; IDC: invasive ductal carcinoma; D: descriptive study; C: correlative; E: experimentally tested; positive: antitumoral role; negative: protumoral role. ∗Studies also performed in mice.
Figure 2Role of mast cells in breast cancer. (a) The influence of mast cells in breast cancer prognosis is still a matter of discussion. Mast cells contain a great variety of bioactive components that may exert both pro- and antitumor effects. On the one hand, in vitro and in vivo studies support that mast cells exhibit protumor activity through promotion of lymphatic and blood vessel formation, tumor growth, and metastasis (orange right side). On the other hand, several population studies also associate mast cells with a greater survival and favorable prognosis (green left side). (b) Some bioactive molecules of mast cells documented to have protumorigenic effects are tryptase through its receptor PAR-2 and histamine through H2 receptor. The cancer processes in which these compounds have been associated are indicated.