| Literature DB >> 32195244 |
Marco Montagner1, Erik Sahai2.
Abstract
Delayed relapses at distant sites are a common clinical observation for certain types of cancers after removal of primary tumor, such as breast and prostate cancer. This evidence has been explained by postulating a long period during which disseminated cancer cells (DCCs) survive in a foreign environment without developing into overt metastasis. Because of the asymptomatic nature of this phenomenon, isolation, and analysis of disseminated dormant cancer cells from clinically disease-free patients is ethically and technically highly problematic and currently these data are largely limited to the bone marrow. That said, detecting, profiling and treating indolent metastatic lesions before the onset of relapse is the imperative. To overcome this major limitation many laboratories developed in vitro models of the metastatic niche for different organs and different types of cancers. In this review we focus specifically on in vitro models designed to study metastatic dormancy of breast cancer cells (BCCs). We provide an overview of the BCCs employed in the different organotypic systems and address the components of the metastatic microenvironment that have been shown to impact on the dormant phenotype: tissue architecture, stromal cells, biochemical environment, oxygen levels, cell density. A brief description of the organ-specific in vitro models for bone, liver, and lung is provided. Finally, we discuss the strategies employed so far for the validation of the different systems.Entities:
Keywords: breast cancer; cancer dormancy; cancer metastasis; in vitro models cancer; metastasis biology; metastatic dormancy
Year: 2020 PMID: 32195244 PMCID: PMC7062644 DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2020.00037
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Dev Biol ISSN: 2296-634X
FIGURE 1Framework for the development of in vitro models of metastatic dormancy. In vitro models should include one or more features of the dormant niche starting from measurements/observations of the target metastatic tissue in vivo. Then cellular systems have to be chosen based on clinical evidences that support their specific use, i.e., correct metastatic tropism, correct gene expression (when available), correct response to signals (such as inflammation). After the initial setup, the in vitro system must be validated and the cell lines, as well as the microenvironment, should exhibit one or more features specific of the dormant phenotype (obtained from animal models or clinical data). The in vitro system should then be exploited to generate hypothesis and prediction that could be tested experimentally in animal models or from clinical data. Finally, according to the feedbacks from the in vivo validation, the system can be refined for more accurate predictions and hypothesis.
FIGURE 2Schematics of selected in vitro organotypic systems designed for studying breast cancer cells (BCCs) metastatic dormancy. Schemes of in vitro systems developed to mimic microenvironments of specific metastatic organs. Details and references of each system are provided in Supplementary Table S2.