| Literature DB >> 30152542 |
Takashi Okumura1, Kenoki Ohuchida1, Shin Kibe1, Chika Iwamoto2, Yohei Ando1, Shin Takesue1, Hiromichi Nakayama1, Toshiya Abe1, Sho Endo1, Kazuhiro Koikawa1, Masafumi Sada1, Kohei Horioka1, Naoki Mochidome1,3, Makoto Arita4, Taiki Moriyama1, Kohei Nakata1, Yoshihiro Miyasaka1, Takao Ohtsuka1, Kazuhiro Mizumoto1, Yoshinao Oda3, Makoto Hashizume2, Masafumi Nakamura1.
Abstract
Although recent studies revealed that adipose tissue accelerates pancreatic tumor progression with excessive extracellular matrix, key players for desmoplasia in the adipose microenvironment remains unknown. Here, we investigated the roles of adipose tissue-derived stromal cells (ASCs) in desmoplastic lesions and tumor progression by in vitro and in vivo experiments. In a three-dimensional (3-D) organotypic fat invasion model using visceral fat from CAG-EGFP mice, GFP-positive fibroblastic cells infiltrated toward cancer cells. When tumor cells were inoculated into transplanted visceral fat pads in vivo, tumor weights and stromal components were enhanced compared to subcutaneous and orthotopic tumor cells inoculated without fat pads. Expression of αSMA in established human ASCs was lower compared to cancer associated fibroblasts, and the 3-D collagen matrices produced by ASCs cultured in cancer cell-conditioned medium changed from loose to dense structures that affected the motility of cancer cells. Microarray analyses revealed upregulation of S100A4 in ASCs, while S100A4-positive stromal cells were observed at extrapancreatic invasion sites of human pancreatic cancer. The present findings indicate that ASCs are recruited to extrapancreatic invasion sites and produce dense collagen matrices that lead to enhanced tumor progression. Both inhibition of ASCs recruitment and activation could lead to a novel antistromal therapy.Entities:
Keywords: adipose tissue-derived stromal cells; desmoplasia; extracellular matrix; extrapancreatic invasion; pancreatic cancer
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30152542 DOI: 10.1002/ijc.31775
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Cancer ISSN: 0020-7136 Impact factor: 7.396