| Literature DB >> 31817625 |
Sadaf Farsinejad1, Thomas Cattabiani1, Taru Muranen2, Marcin Iwanicki1.
Abstract
Epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) comprises multiple disease states representing a variety of distinct tumors that, irrespective of tissue of origin, genetic aberrations and pathological features, share common patterns of dissemination to the peritoneal cavity. EOC peritoneal dissemination is a stepwise process that includes the formation of malignant outgrowths that detach and establish widespread peritoneal metastases through adhesion to serosal membranes. The cell biology associated with outgrowth formation, detachment, and de novo adhesion is at the nexus of diverse genetic backgrounds that characterize the disease. Development of treatment for metastatic disease will require detailed characterization of cellular processes involved in each step of EOC peritoneal dissemination. This article offers a review of the literature that relates to the current stage of knowledge about distinct steps of EOC peritoneal dissemination, with emphasis on the cell biology aspects of the process.Entities:
Keywords: fallopian tube secretory epithelial cells; integrins; myosin; ovarian cancer; peritoneal dissemination
Year: 2019 PMID: 31817625 PMCID: PMC6966436 DOI: 10.3390/cancers11121957
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
EOC subtypes with reported mutations and metastatic sites.
| EOC Main Types | EOC Subtypes | Mutations [ | Metastatic Sites | References (PMID) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Endometroid | Distant lymph node metastasis, liver parenchymal metastasis, plural effusion with positive cytology | [ | |
| Mucinous | Peritoneum, omentum, appendix gastrointestinal, pancreas, cervix, breast, uterus Distant lymph node metastasis, liver parenchymal metastasis, plural effusion with positive cytology | [ | ||
| Clear cell | Peritoneal cavity, paraaortic lymph node, distant metastasis in parenchymal organ; Pleura, liver, lung, may initially present with bone metastases, and skin metastases very rarely | [ | ||
| Low-grade serous | Distant lymph node metastasis, liver parenchymal metastasis, plural effusion with positive cytology, bone | [ | ||
|
| High-grade serous | Distant lymph node metastasis, liver parenchymal metastasis, plural effusion with positive cytology, omentum, falciform ligament, sigmoid serosa, appendix, pelvic side wall, paracolic gutter, bladder serosa | [ |
Figure 1EOC outgrowth formation, dissociation, and colonization.
EOC dissemination steps driven by cellular and molecular mechanisms.
| Dissemination Steps | Cellular Process | Molecular Process | References |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Modulation of adhesion mediated by cytoskeleton and cell-cycle regulators | -NMMII and ROCK | [ |
| -Cell arrest at G2/M | |||
| ECM remodeling | -Activation of MMP, integrin B1, and Lamininγ1 deposition on cell surface. | [ | |
| Loss of apical–basal cell polarity | -Loss of ParD6 (cell polarity regulator) | [ | |
| -Inhibition of TGFBR1, downregulation of SMAD2 | |||
|
| Loss of adhesion to basement membrane | -MT1-MMP by cleavage of integrin α3 | [ |
| Escaping anoikis | -Detaching as clusters help bypassing anoikis | [ | |
| Proximity of tubal mucosa to ovarian surface epithelium favors direct adhesion | [ | ||
|
| LPA -induced survival signaling | -Activates MAPK, PI3K, PKC, Rho-GTPase, RAC, CDC24 | [ |
| -Downregulation of APC6 (LPA-degrading enzyme) | |||
| -Activation of FAK signaling | [ | ||
| -Rho–ROCK-mediated ECM remodeling and assembly of Integrin adhesion | [ | ||
| Adhesion to ECM | -ECM deposition on cell surface with help of upregulated integrins and suppressed anoikis | [ | |
| -Required for growth factor-mediated signaling | |||
| Soluble immune-stimulating molecules | -IL6; inactivation of pro-apoptotic factors, i.e., JAK, RAS, PDK1, AKT, and apoptotic factors, i.e., BAX, BAD | [ | |
| -Expansion of cancer stem cells after chemotherapy | |||
| -TNFα; promotes tumor survival and growth, correlated with other cytokines (IL6) and chemotactic factors, i.e., CCL2 and CCLX2 | [ | ||
| -EGF; secreted by TAM, promotes cell mobility. | [ | ||
|
| Appropriate niche for adhesion of suspended cancer cells through cell surface receptors | -Cell-surface receptors; CD44, MUC16, placental cadherin, integrins such as α5β1 | [ |
| -Requires activation of NMMII and ROCK | |||
| -Mediated by EMT; upregulation of vimentin | |||
|
| Tumor cells reprogram non-malignant cells such as fibroblasts, neutrophils, mesothelial cells, adipocytes by secreting pro-inflammatory molecules | -Fibroblasts reprogramed by cytokine-dependent regulation of miRNAs, turn to CAF and secrete growth and chemotactic molecules to support tumor progression | [ |
| -Mesothelial cells reprogramed by TGFβ secreted from tumor cells, secrete more fibronectin, facilitate tumor attachment | [ | ||
| -Tumor cells secrete cytokines to attract neutrophils and promote their death and netosis, creating nets that capture and reinforce adhesion and growth of tumor cells | [ | ||
| -Adipocytes secrete adipokines to attract cancer cells to the omental surface. Activate lipolysis in cancer cells which provide energy for cancer growth. Adipocytes also activate kinases, including SIK2, leading to PI3K/AKT axis, which regulates cell survival, proliferation, and motility. | [ |
Figure 2Stages of EOC metastasis.