| Literature DB >> 31443371 |
Masahito Tachi1,2, Hideshi Okada3, Nobuhisa Matsuhashi2, Genzou Takemura4, Kodai Suzuki1, Hirotsugu Fukuda1, Ayumi Niwa5, Takuji Tanaka6, Hideki Mori5, Akira Hara5, Kazuhiro Yoshida2, Shinji Ogura1, Hiroyuki Tomita7.
Abstract
Cancer cells can survive and grow via angiogenesis. An alternative but controversial theory is cancer cells may grow via vasculogenic mimicry (VM), in which the cancer cells themselves construct vessel-like channels that are considered a leading cause of drug resistance. The dynamic functions of the glycocalyx (GCX), a meshwork composed of proteoglycans and glycoproteins that surrounds cell membranes, have been observed in endothelial cells within tumors. However, the actual structural shape formed by the GCX in human patients remains unclear. Here, we visualized the three-dimensional (3D) network structure constructed by bulky GCX in human colorectal cancer (CRC) patients using scanning electron microscopy with lanthanum nitrate staining. The network structure extended throughout the cancer cell nest, opening into capillaries, with a tunnel channel that exhibited a net- and spongy-like ultrastructure. The expression of endothelial and cancer-specific GCX-binding lectins was dramatically increased in the interstitial spaces between cancer cells. Even accounting for the presence of artifacts resulting from sample preparation methods, the intercellular tunnels appeared to be coated with the bulky GCX. Further, this 3D network structure was also observed in the tumors of ApcMin/+ mice. In conclusion, the bulky GCX modifies the network structure of CRCs in human and mice.Entities:
Keywords: angiogenesis; colorectal cancer; electron microscopy; glycocalyx; vasculogenic mimicry
Year: 2019 PMID: 31443371 PMCID: PMC6780787 DOI: 10.3390/jcm8091270
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Figure 1Vasculogenic mimicry (VM) formation defined by CD31−/PAS+ expression is uncommon in patient-derived colorectal cancer (CRC) tissues. (a) Image of a surgical specimen obtained from a human CRC patient. Cubic-shaped tissues of 10 × 5 × 5 mm were resected from normal-appearing tissue and cancerous lesions. The samples were sectioned and used accordingly. (b) Images of HE-staining (left) and CD31/PAS expression (right) in CRC tissues. Arrows indicate CD31+/PAS+ capillary vessels, but not VM formation. Scale bars represent 50 μm. (b) VM quantification in five CRC tissue samples. Data: Averages ± standard deviations.
Figure 2Three-dimensional network structure of a cancer capillary channel surrounded by human CRC cells. (a) SEM image with lanthanum nitrate of a vessel in normal-appearing mucosa. Right image: High magnification of the left image. Arrowheads indicate 3D mesh-like endothelial glycocalyx (GCX). RBC: Red blood cell. (b) TEM image with lanthanum nitrate of a vessel in normal-appearing mucosa. Arrows indicate moss-like endothelial GCX. RBC: Red blood cell. END: Endothelial cell. (c) SEM image with lanthanum nitrate (left) and guided image (right) showing the relationship between cancer cell nests and capillary vessels in a cross section. Cap: Capillary. (i–iii) High-magnification image (left) and guided image (right) of the rectangles in (i–iii), respectively. Asterisk indicates uncoated capillary wall. (d) A pore of the capillary opened and connected to the network structure composed of the cancer cells themselves in another patient. RBC: Red blood cell. Asterisk: A pore of the capillary.
Figure 3Three-dimensional structure coated by the GCX in patient-derived CRC cells. (a) SEM and guided images with lanthanum nitrate showing transverse, surface, and cross sections of representative cancer tissue. Left diagrams indicate a representative cancer cell. Arrowheads indicate interstitial channels with bridge-like GCX. (b) SEM images of transverse sections of a normal-appearing crypt. (c) Backscattered electron micrograph of cancer tissue. (Right) High-magnification image of the dotted-line rectangle in the left-hand image. The bush- and bridge-like structure includes lanthanum, indicating that this structure is the GCX (arrowheads).
Figure 4Intercellular tunnels are wide in human CRC tissues regardless of fixation procedure. (a) Images of Azan staining in fresh-frozen tissues (normal and cancer tissue) of a CRC patient. Arrows (both white and yellow) indicate the width of intercellular tunnels. (b) Images of Azan staining in 10% neutral buffered formalin-fixed tissues (normal and cancer tissue) of a CRC patient. Arrows (both white and yellow) indicate the width of intercellular tunnels. (c) TEM image with lanthanum nitrate of representative normal and cancer tissue. Arrows indicate the width of intercellular tunnels. Arrowheads indicate bridge-like ultrastructures. (d) SEM image with lanthanum nitrate of representative normal and cancer tissue. Arrows indicate the width of intercellular tunnels. Arrowheads indicate bridge-like ultrastructures. (e) Intercellular tunnels between cancer cells were wider than those between normal-appearing epithelial cells in TEM images with lanthanum nitrate. Error bars represent ± standard deviations of the average values.
Figure 5Cancer- and endothelial-related lectins expressed in cancer intercellular regions. (a) Merged images illustrating IF staining of lectins (UEA-1 and VVL: Red) and antibodies (pan-CK or CD34: green) with DAPI (blue). Scale bars: 10 μm. (b) Merged images illustrating IF staining of lectins (UEA-1 and VVL: red) and antibodies (CD31, CD34, and pan-CK: green) with DAPI (blue). Insets in the Pan-CK panel indicate high magnification. Cap: capillaries. Scale bars: 10 μm. (c) Merged images illustrating IF staining of lectins (UEA-1 and VVL: red) and antibodies (VEGF: green) with DAPI (blue). Scale bars: 10 μm. (d) Merged images illustrating immunofluorescent (IF) staining of CDH1 antibody (green) with DAPI (blue). Insets in upper images indicate lower high magnification images. Scale bars: 10 μm.
Figure 6Murine colon cancer phenocopies the 3D network structure in human CRC tissues. (a) Representative hematoxylin and eosin (HE) images of frozen sections of ApcMin/+ colon tumor (left) and human colorectal cancer (right). Older ApcMin/+ mice developed several advanced colon tumors at 30 weeks of age, mimicking human adenocarcinomas. (b) Representative SEM and guided images of a colon tumor in an ApcMin/+ mouse at 30 weeks of age. (i) High magnification of the rectangle in the upper image showing the relationship between a tumor cell nest and a capillary. (ii) Transverse and (iii) cross sections of Apc colon tumors. (c) Double IF staining of β-catenin (green) and VVL lectin (red) in the normal crypts and colon tumors of older ApcMin/+ mice. Scale bars indicate 5 μm.
Figure 7Diagram showing three-dimensional (3D) cancer infrastructure in human CRC.