| Literature DB >> 30603045 |
Shantanu Pradhan1, John L Sperduto1, Cindy J Farino1, John H Slater1,2,3.
Abstract
Metastatic recurrence is a major hurdle to overcome for successful control of cancer-associated death. Residual tumor cells in the primary site, or disseminated tumor cells in secondary sites, can lie in a dormant state for long time periods, years to decades, before being reactivated into a proliferative growth state. The microenvironmental signals and biological mechanisms that mediate the fate of disseminated cancer cells with respect to cell death, single cell dormancy, tumor mass dormancy and metastatic growth, as well as the factors that induce reactivation, are discussed in this review. Emphasis is placed on engineered, in vitro, biomaterial-based approaches to model tumor dormancy and subsequent reactivation, with a focus on the roles of extracellular matrix, secondary cell types, biochemical signaling and drug treatment. A brief perspective of molecular targets and treatment approaches for dormant tumors is also presented. Advances in tissue-engineered platforms to induce, model, and monitor tumor dormancy and reactivation may provide much needed insight into the regulation of these processes and serve as drug discovery and testing platforms.Entities:
Keywords: Angiogenic dormancy; Drug Testing; Extracellular matrix; Hypoxia; Metastasis; Microphysiological Systems; Quiescence; Relapse; Single cell dormancy; Tissue Engineering
Year: 2018 PMID: 30603045 PMCID: PMC6307145 DOI: 10.1186/s13036-018-0120-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Eng ISSN: 1754-1611 Impact factor: 4.355
Fig. 1Fate of disseminated tumor cells. Circulating tumor cells extravasate from vasculature at secondary sites and undergo one of four fates in the secondary niche: cell death (primarily via apoptosis), cellular dormancy (remain as single quiescent cells), tumor mass dormancy (small clusters with balanced proliferation and apoptosis) and metastatic growth (high proliferation and invasion). Cell Death: representative image of MCF7 cancer cells within hydrogel millibeads fluorescently labeled with ethidium homodimer (red) (Adapted from [90]) Copyright 2014, ACS. Cellular Dormancy: representative image of MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells within hydrogels fluorescently labeled with calcein AM (green)/ethidium homodimer (red) (unpublished). Tumor Mass Dormancy: HMT-3522-T4-2 breast cancer cells cultured with lung stromal cells and endothelial cells form a small, non-proliferative colony (dotted circle) (Adapted from [42]). Metastatic Growth: HMT-3522-T4-2 cells cultured with lung stromal cells develop into invasive, proliferative clusters representative of metastatic outgrowth (dotted region) (Adapted from [42]). Copyright 2013, Springer Nature
Summary of in vitro dormancy models classified by cancer/cell type and mode of dormancy induction with associated metrics used to determine dormancy status
| Cancer/Cell Type | Mode of Dormancy Induction | Metrics Analyzed |
|---|---|---|
| Breast Cancer | ECM-Induced | - Proliferation [ |
| Prostate Cancer | ECM-Induced | - Proliferation [ |
| Lung cancer | ECM-Induced | - Proliferation [ |
| Colorectal/Colon Cancer | ECM-Induced | - Proliferation [ |
| Pancreatic Cancer | ECM-Induced | - Proliferation [ |
| Other Cancers | ECM-Induced | - Proliferation [ |
Abbreviations: 5-FU 5-Fluorouracil, ECM Extra-Cellular Matrix, EGF Epidermal Growth Factor, EVs Extracellular Vesicles, FGF-2 Fibroblast Growth Factor-2, MSCs Mesenchymal Stem/Stromal Cells, NPCs Non-Parenchymal Cells
Fig. 2Modes of dormancy induction. Engineered, in vitro models of tumor dormancy can be classified based on the mode of dormancy induction: drug-induced dormancy (selective elimination and survival of sub-populations under chemotherapeutic treatment), ECM-induced dormancy (biophysical constraints imposed on cancer cells by the surrounding matrix), cell-signaling induced dormancy (paracrine signaling from stromal cells and vasculature) and biochemical-induced dormancy (influence of soluble factors, hypoxia and nutrients)
Fig. 3Engineered, in vitro models for induction of cancer dormancy. Representative examples of in vitro dormancy models classified by induction mode. a MDA-MB-231-RFP cells co-cultured with primary human hepatocytes and non-parenchymal cells (NPCs) within a hepatic microphysiological system either seeded on a polystyrene surface or encapsulated within a PEG-peptide hydrogel matrix and imaged on day 15. Arrows: dormant cells, asterisks: proliferative cells. Scale bar = 300 μm. (Adapted from [105]). Copyright 2017, RSC. b MDA-MB-231 cells cultured within Col-Tgel hydrogels demonstrate an increased dormancy signature characterized by reduced MTT staining, reduced cell death and lower cell density. Green: calcein AM, red: ethidium homodimer. Scale bar = 1000 μm. (Adapted from [89]). Copyright 2017, Springer Nature. c GFP expressing, non-small-cell lung cancer cells (NSCLC) cultured with alveolar epithelial cells and lung microvascular endothelial cells within a microfabricated lung-on-a-chip device for 2 weeks to investigate the role of physiological breathing motions on the growth/dormancy of cancer cells. Red: VE-cadherin, white: ZO-1 tight junctions, Scale bar = 200 μm (center), 50 μm (right). (Adapted from [104]). Copyright 2017, Elsevier. d RFP expressing breast cancer cells cultured with hepatocytes and NPCs within a liver microphysiological system for 2 weeks and fluorescently labeled for Ki67 or EdU (green) and nuclei (blue). Scale bar = 200 μm. Solid white arrows: dormant cells, dashed white arrows: proliferative cells. (Adapted from [119]). Copyright 2014, NPG. e MDA-MB-231 cells cultured with GFP expressing MSCs and imaged under phase contrast (PC) and green fluorescence (GFP) at varying time points are observed to cannibalize MSCs within 3D spheroids and enter dormancy, leading to reduced GFP signal intensity. Scale bar = 100 μm. (Adapted from [117]). Copyright 2016, NAS. f HMT-3522-T4-2 breast cancer cells cultured with lung/bone marrow stromal cells and endothelial cells remain as dormant clusters through day 17 with low proliferation. Scale bar = 100 μm. (Adapted from [42]). Copyright 2013, NPG. g MCF7 cells treated with 300 μM CoCl2 undergo hypoxia and enter dormancy with low proliferation. Scale bar = 200 μm. (Adapted from [129]). Copyright 2018, Springer Nature. h MDA-MB-231 cells within Col-Tgel hydrogels exhibit reduced proliferation and cluster size with increasing distance from the hydrogel edge due to a hypoxia gradient. Scale bar = 100 μm. (Adapted from [128]). Copyright 2014, PloS. i MCF7 cells seeded on a fibronectin-coated substrate and treated with FGF-2 undergo a dormancy phenotype with cortical actin redistribution around the perimeter of the cytoplasm (red arrows). Scale bar = 20 μm. (Adapted from [137]). Copyright 2009, Springer. j MDA-MB-231 cells in an engineered liver niche treated with doxorubicin exhibit reduced proliferation compared to the control group. Scale bar = 200 μm (top), 50 μm (bottom). (Adapted from [81]). Copyright 2013, ASBMB. k Breast and prostate cancer cells treated with docetaxel exhibit residual tumor cells with dormancy signatures. (Adapted from [148]). Copyright 2014, PloS
ECM-based matrices to induce dormancy
| Biomaterial/ECM | Characteristics | Mechanism Inducing Dormancy |
|---|---|---|
| Collagen/Gelatin [ | Naturally occurring animal-derived biopolymer with collagen/gelatin backbone crosslinked with transglutaminase | Increased stiffness resulting from increased crosslinking density of gelatin precursor |
| Agarose [ | Plant-derived biopolymer physically crosslinked at ambient temperature | Mechanical stress arising from a confining, non-adhesive matrix |
| Matrigel [ | Mouse-tumor derived matrix consisting of collagen, laminin, elastin and growth factors amongst other components | Physical confinement in a 3D matrix |
| Fibrin [ | Naturally occurring biopolymer in blood obtained via crosslinking of fibrinogen with thrombin | Matrix stiffness |
| PEG [ | Synthetic bio-inert polymer that can be chemically and mechanically tuned | Non-degradability and physical confinement |
| Silica-PEG [ | Silicate network gel formed via hydrolysis of silicon alkoxide and condensation reaction to form a porous silica network, with PEG porogen and silica nanoparticles | Physical confinement in a non-degradable matrix |
| Collagen-PEG IPN [ | Double crosslinked network of collagen and PEG with varying PEG concentrations | Physical confinement in an increasingly non-degradable matrix |
| PEG-protein and PEG-peptide blends [ | Covalent coupling of PEG with proteins (fibrinogen) or ECM-mimetic peptides (RGDS) | Controlled cell-matrix interactions |
Abbreviations: 3D Three-dimensional, ECM Extracellular matrix, IPN Interpenetrating network, PEG Poly(ethylene glycol);
Fig. 4Factors influencing reactivation of dormant cancer cells. Dormant tumor cells in the secondary niche can be stimulated or triggered toward metastatic growth via multiple sources including pro-inflammatory and angiogenic factors, paracrine signaling by stromal cells and sprouting vasculature, and dysregulated cell-matrix interactions amongst others