| Literature DB >> 30537992 |
Kazuya Kuwada1, Shunsuke Kagawa2,3, Ryuichi Yoshida1, Shuichi Sakamoto1, Atene Ito1, Megumi Watanabe1, Takeshi Ieda1, Shinji Kuroda1,4, Satoru Kikuchi1,5, Hiroshi Tazawa1,4, Toshiyoshi Fujiwara1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The peritoneum is one of the most frequent metastatic sites in pancreatic cancer patients, and peritoneal dissemination makes this disease refractory due to aggressive progression and chemoresistance. Although the role of the tumor microenvironment in cancer development is recognized, the correlation between the peritoneal environment and refractoriness of peritoneal dissemination remains unclear. The intraperitoneal tumor-microenvironment and its potential role in the progression of peritoneal dissemination and chemo-refractoriness, focusing especially on macrophages, were investigated.Entities:
Keywords: Chemoresistance; Epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition; Pancreatic cancer; Peritoneal dissemination; Tumor-associated macrophages
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30537992 PMCID: PMC6288926 DOI: 10.1186/s13046-018-0981-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Clin Cancer Res ISSN: 0392-9078
Fig. 1Immunofluorescence assays of cells comprising the peritoneal microenvironment. a. Clinical samples of peritoneal washes obtained from a cytology-positive case. After TelomeScan was infected at an MOI of 1 for 24 h, and cancer cells were identified as GFP-positive cells, leukocytes and monocytes were stained with A647-labeled anti-CD45 antibodies and PE-labeled anti-CD14 antibodies, respectively. b. Clinical samples of peritoneal wash obtained from another cytology-positive case were analyzed. GFP-positive cells are detected after TelomeScan. The polarity of macrophages to M2 phenotype is confirmed with PE-conjugated anti-CD204
Fig. 2Induction of the EMT in cancer cells. a. Induction process in THP-1 cells to M1 or M2 macrophages. b. Western blot analyses of CD80, an M1 macrophage marker, CD204, an M2 macrophage marker, and CD68, a pan-macrophage marker. c. Immunofluorescence staining of M1 and M2 type macrophages. d. Morphological changes after Panc1 and BxPC-3 cells were co-cultured with macrophages. e. Western blot analyses show that Panc1 and BxPC-3 cells co-cultured with macrophages express vimentin and α-SMA proteins but have decreased E-cadherin
Fig. 3Tumor-associated macrophages promote migration and invasion. After co-culture with macrophages, Panc1 and BxPC-3 cells have enhanced migration and invasion abilities. C: control. M: co-culture with macrophages. Results are from representative experiments in quadruplicate and are shown as means ± S.D. * p < 0.01
Fig. 4Cancer cells show chemoresistance after co-culture with macrophages. Panc1 and BxPC-3 cells cultured with macrophages were exposed to gemcitabine for 48 h at different concentrations. Cell viability was measured in triplicate by XTT assay, and representative results are shown as means ± S.D. The calculated IC50 is shown in the lower tables
Fig. 5Tumor-associated macrophages promote tumorigenesis. a Subcutaneous BxPC-3-luc tumors co-inoculated with macrophages tend to grow more rapidly than controls. N = 3/each tumor. Pictures: Representative IVIS imaging on days 21, 35, and 42. b Peritoneal BxPC-3-luc tumors co-inoculated with macrophages grow significantly more rapidly than controls. N = 8/treatment group. * p < 0.01. Pictures: Representative IVIS imaging on day 37
Fig. 6Co-inoculated macrophages make xenografted pancreatic cancer BxPC-3-luc more resistant to chemotherapy than control. Mice intraperitoneally xenografted with BxPC-3-luc cells were treated with gemcitabine 3 times weekly. Growth curves are shown in the upper panels, and tumor burdens on day 37 are plotted in the lower panels where bars indicate the means and 95% confidence intervals. While chemotherapy significantly suppresses the growth of peritoneal tumors (a), co-inoculation of macrophages offsets the therapeutic effect (b). * p < 0.05 (unpaired t-test)