| Literature DB >> 33114328 |
Kévin Louault1,2,3, Rong-Rong Li4, Yves A DeClerck1,2,3,5.
Abstract
The tumor microenvironment (TME) plays a critical role in tumor progression. Among its multiple components are cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) that are the main suppliers of extracellular matrix molecules and important contributors to inflammation. As a source of growth factors, cytokines, chemokines and other regulatory molecules, they participate in cancer progression, metastasis, angiogenesis, immune cell reprogramming and therapeutic resistance. Nevertheless, their role is not fully understood, and is sometimes controversial due to their heterogeneity. CAFs are heterogeneous in their origin, phenotype, function and presence within tumors. As a result, strategies to target CAFs in cancer therapy have been hampered by the difficulties in better defining the various populations of CAFs and by the lack of clear recognition of their specific function in cancer progression. This review discusses how a greater understanding of the heterogeneous nature of CAFs could lead to better approaches aimed at their use or at their targeting in the treatment of cancer.Entities:
Keywords: biomarkers; cancer; cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs); heterogeneity; mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs); tumor microenvironment (TME)
Year: 2020 PMID: 33114328 PMCID: PMC7690906 DOI: 10.3390/cancers12113108
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1Origin of Cancer-Associated Fibroblasts. The different cellular sources for CAFs are shown, colors indicate the type of origin. Factors involved in the recruitment, differentiation and activation of these cells into CAFs are indicated for each cell type.
Figure 2Heterogenous Function and Phenotype of Cancer-Associated Fibroblasts. The inner circle lists subtypes of CAFs reported by various groups of investigators. The middle circle indicates markers and proteins secreted by each subtype and in the outer circle, the functions attributed for each subtype are indicated by the colored circles representing one among the six CAF functions listed in the margin.
Phenotypic and functional heterogeneity of Cancer-Associated Fibroblasts and therapeutic approaches.
| Cancers | Subtypes | Clusters | IHC/Flow Cytometry | scRNA-seq | Functions | Ref. | Preclinical/Clinical Trials | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Not Specific | Probably Specific | |||||||
| Breast/PDAC | CAF-1 | FSP1, VEGF, TNC | Angiogenesis, Metastasis | [ | αFAP therapy, CD105 mAb, Dasatinib, miRNAs therapy, Scriptaid, Ruxolitinib, Losartan, Nab-paclitaxel, AMD3100, Galunisertib | |||
| CAF-2 | αSMA, NG2, PDGFRβ | Physical Barrier, Immunosuppression | Dasatinib | |||||
| OSCC | CAF-N | HA, MMP | Invasion, Immunosuppression | [ | Losartan, Nab-paclitaxel | |||
| CAF-D | TGF-β | Migration | Galunisertib | |||||
| Colorectal | CAF-A | MMP2, αFAP, COL1A2 | [ | αFAP therapy, Losartan, Nab-paclitaxel | ||||
| CAF-B | αSMA, PDGFA, TAGLN | |||||||
| PDAC | rCAFs | PDPN, meflin | Anti-tumorigenic | [ | ||||
| myCAFs (pCAFs) | PDPN, αSMA | αSMA, TAGLN, TPM1, TPM2, POSTN | Proliferation, Migration, Invasion, Metastasis | [ | Galunisertib, Losartan, Nab-paclitaxel | |||
| LRRC15 | PDPN, αSMA, LRRC15 | Chemoresistance | [ | |||||
| iCAFs (pCAFs) | PDPN, IL-6, LIF, IL-11 | IL-6, IL-8, CXCL1, CXCL12, CFD, LMN, DPT | Metastasis, Angiogenesis, Immunosuppression | [ | Ruxolitinib | |||
| apCAFs (pCAFs) | PDPN, COL1A2 | H2-Aa, H2-Ab1, CD74 | Immunosuppression | [ | ||||
| Breast | CAF-S1 | ecm-myCAF | CD29, αFAP, PDGFRβ, FSP1, αSMA, cav1 | LRRC15, GBJ2 | Proliferation, Migration, Invasion, Metastasis, Immunosuppression | [ | αFAP therapy (CAF-S1), Dasatinib (CAF-S1), Galunisertib (myCAF), Ruxolitinib (iCAF) | |
| detox-iCAF | ADH1B, GPX3 | |||||||
| IL-iCAF | RGMA, SCARA5 | |||||||
| TGFβ-myCAF | CST1, TGFβ1 | |||||||
| wound-myCAF | SEMA3C, SFRP4 | |||||||
| IFNγ-iCAF | CCL19, CCL5 | |||||||
| IFNαβ-myCAF | IFIT3, IRF | |||||||
| acto-myCAF | GGH, PLP2 | |||||||
| CAF-S2 | ||||||||
| CAF-S3 | CD29, FSP1, PDGFRβ | Dasatinib | ||||||
| CAF-S4 | CD29, FSP1, PDGFRβ, αSMA | Proliferation, Migration, Invasion, Metastasis | Dasatinib | |||||
| CD10/GPR77 | CD10, GPR77 | Proliferation, Migration, Chemoresistance | [ | |||||
| vCAFs | Cdh5, Pecam1, CD34, Notch3, Nr2f2, Epas1 | Angiogenesis | [ | |||||
| dCAFs | MFAP5, Scgr1, Sox9, Sox10 | |||||||
| mCAFs | Dcn, Lum, Fbln1, Smoc, Lox, Loxl1 | |||||||
Different mechanisms of pro- and anti-tumorigenic CAFs activities with the secretion associated.
| Activity | Mechanisms | Proteins involved | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Proliferation, Survival | Stimulation of proliferation | TGF-β1, CXCL-12, FGF, POSTN, OPN, HGF, IL-6, IL-22 | [ |
| Inhibition of apoptosis | Upregulation of BCL-2 and MCL1, downregulation of Bax | [ | |
| Chemoresistance | Inhibition of apoptosis | IL-6, IL-17A, PDGF, IGF, upregulation of MCL-1 | [ |
| Stimulation of CSCs | C5a, IL-6 | [ | |
| Inhibition of bioavailability, vascular collapse | HA, collagen | [ | |
| Ferroptosis, cell cycle inhibition | miR-522, CmiR-98-5p | [ | |
| Migration, Invasion, Metastasis | Stimulation of EMT | TGF-β, IL-32, PDGF, FGF, HGF, C3a | [ |
| Stimulation of cytoskeleton (motility) | TGF-β, upregulation of ARHGAP29 | [ | |
| ECM remodeling | MMP2, MMP3, MMP9 | [ | |
| Angiogenesis | Recruitment/Proliferation of ECs and pericytes | VEGF, PDGF, CXCL-12, HGF, IL-6, IL-8 | [ |
| Vascular mimicry | TGF-β, CXCL-12, MMP2 | [ | |
| Immunomodulation | Recruitment/Proliferation of immune cells | IL-1β, CCL22, CXCL-12, CCL2, CXCL1, CXCL5, IL-8, PGE2 | [ |
| Polarization of immune cells | IL-10, IL-12 | [ | |
| Immunotolerance (MDSC, Treg…) | CCL17, CCL22, CCL2, CXCL-12, IL-6, IL-17, IL-10, PD-1, CTLA4 | [ | |
| Inhibition of cytotoxic cells (lymphocyte, NK cells…) | TGF-β, CXCL1, IL-10, βig-h3, IL-6, IL-17 | [ | |
| Antigen presenting | MHC-II, CD74 | [ | |
| Anti-tumorigenic | Inhibition of proliferation | IL-6, TNF-α, TGF-β | [ |
| Inhibition of CSCs stimulation | BMP4 | [ | |
| Inhibition of angiogenesis | Downregulation of HGF, FGF, VEGF, IL-8 | [ | |
| Inhibition of Treg cells | Downregulation of HGF, IL-6, FGF, CXCL-12 | [ |
Figure 3In silico gene expression analysis of 14 genes expressed by CAFs in human tumors. (A). Heat map representation of the expression of 14 genes (column) among 33 types of cancer (row). Data were generated by Gene Expression Profiling Interactive Analysis (GEPIA) of The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) database; (B). Correlation analysis between the expression of S100A4 and COL1A2 in cancer.