| Literature DB >> 32728200 |
M Liguori1, E Digifico2, A Vacchini1,3, R Avigni1, F S Colombo1, E M Borroni1,3, F M Farina1, S Milanesi1,3, A Castagna1,3, L Mannarino4, I Craparotta4, S Marchini4, E Erba4, N Panini4, M Tamborini1,3, V Rimoldi1, P Allavena5, C Belgiovine6.
Abstract
In cancer, myeloid cells have tumor-supporting roles. We reported that the protein GPNMB (glycoprotein nonmetastatic B) was profoundly upregulated in macrophages interacting with tumor cells. Here, using mouse tumor models, we show that macrophage-derived soluble GPNMB increases tumor growth and metastasis in Gpnmb-mutant mice (DBA/2J). GPNMB triggers in the cancer cells the formation of self-renewing spheroids, which are characterized by the expression of cancer stem cell markers, prolonged cell survival and increased tumor-forming ability. Through the CD44 receptor, GPNMB mechanistically activates tumor cells to express the cytokine IL-33 and its receptor IL-1R1L. We also determined that recombinant IL-33 binding to IL-1R1L is sufficient to induce tumor spheroid formation with features of cancer stem cells. Overall, our results reveal a new paracrine axis, GPNMB and IL-33, which is activated during the cross talk of macrophages with tumor cells and eventually promotes cancer cell survival, the expansion of cancer stem cells and the acquisition of a metastatic phenotype.Entities:
Keywords: GPNMB; IL-33; cancer stem cells; metastasis; tumor associated macrophages
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32728200 PMCID: PMC8027814 DOI: 10.1038/s41423-020-0501-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Mol Immunol ISSN: 1672-7681 Impact factor: 11.530