| Literature DB >> 33450198 |
Yansen Xiao1, Min Cong2, Jiatao Li1, Dasa He1, Qiuyao Wu1, Pu Tian1, Yuan Wang1, Shuaixi Yang3, Chenxi Liang1, Yajun Liang1, Jili Wen1, Yingjie Liu1, Wenqian Luo1, Xianzhe Lv1, Yunfei He1, Dong-Dong Cheng4, Tianhao Zhou5, Wenjing Zhao6, Peiyuan Zhang1, Xue Zhang1, Yichuan Xiao1, Youcun Qian1, Hongxia Wang5, Qiang Gao3, Qing-Cheng Yang4, Qifeng Yang6, Guohong Hu7.
Abstract
Lung metastasis is the major cause of breast cancer-related mortality. The neutrophil-associated inflammatory microenvironment aids tumor cells in metastatic colonization in lungs. Here, we show that tumor-secreted protease cathepsin C (CTSC) promotes breast-to-lung metastasis by regulating recruitment of neutrophils and formation of neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs). CTSC enzymatically activates neutrophil membrane-bound proteinase 3 (PR3) to facilitate interleukin-1β (IL-1β) processing and nuclear factor κB activation, thus upregulating IL-6 and CCL3 for neutrophil recruitment. In addition, the CTSC-PR3-IL-1β axis induces neutrophil reactive oxygen species production and formation of NETs, which degrade thrombospondin-1 and support metastatic growth of cancer cells in the lungs. CTSC expression and secretion are associated with NET formation and lung metastasis in human breast tumors. Importantly, targeting CTSC with compound AZD7986 effectively suppresses lung metastasis of breast cancer in a mouse model. Overall, our findings reveal a mechanism of how tumor cells regulate neutrophils in metastatic niches and support CTSC-targeting approaches for cancer treatment.Entities:
Keywords: Cathespin C; breast cancer; lung metastasis; metastatic niche; neutrophil; neutrophil extracellular trap
Year: 2021 PMID: 33450198 DOI: 10.1016/j.ccell.2020.12.012
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Cell ISSN: 1535-6108 Impact factor: 31.743