| Literature DB >> 33888841 |
Wei Bin Fang1, Diana Sofia Acevedo1, Curtis Smart1, Brandon Zinda1, Nadia Alissa1, Kyle Warren1, Garth Fraga1, Li-Ching Huang2, Yu Shyr2, Wei Li3, Lu Xie3, Vincent Staggs4, Yan Hong1, Fariba Behbod1, Nikki Cheng5.
Abstract
Ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) is the most common type of pre-invasive breast cancer diagnosed in women. Because the majority of DCIS cases are unlikely to progress to invasive breast cancer, many women are over-treated for DCIS. By understanding the molecular basis of early stage breast cancer progression, we may identify better prognostic factors and design treatments tailored specifically to the predicted outcome of DCIS. Chemokines are small soluble molecules with complex roles in inflammation and cancer progression. Previously, we demonstrated that CCL2/CCR2 chemokine signaling in breast cancer cell lines regulated growth and invasion through p42/44MAPK and SMAD3 dependent mechanisms. Here, we sought to determine the clinical and functional relevance of CCL2/CCR2 signaling proteins to DCIS progression. Through immunostaining analysis of DCIS and IDC tissues, we show that expression of CCL2, CCR2, phospho-SMAD3 and phospho-p42/44MAPK correlate with IDC. Using PDX models and an immortalized hDCIS.01 breast epithelial cell line, we show that breast epithelial cells with high CCR2 and high CCL2 levels form invasive breast lesions that express phospho-SMAD3 and phospho-p42/44MAPK. These studies demonstrate that increased CCL2/CCR2 signaling in breast tissues is associated with DCIS progression, and could be a signature to predict the likelihood of DCIS progression to IDC.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33888841 PMCID: PMC8062684 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-88229-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Clinical features for DCIS and IDC patient samples from the Biospecimen Core Repository Facility.
| Factor | DCIS (n = 53) | IDC (n = 74) |
|---|---|---|
| Black | 8% | 5% |
| White | 62% | 91% |
| Asian/other | 30% | 4% |
| Median age | 52 | 55 |
| ER | 4.6a 65.3b 98c | 90a 99b 100c |
| PR | 0a 27.5b 86.5c | 1.5a 85b 100c |
| 0 | 27% | 51% |
| 1 | 42% | 44% |
| 2 | 12% | 0% |
| 3 | 19% | 5% |
| Median Ki67 | 6 | 5 |
Percent of total are shown with actual number of cases in parentheses.
a25% percentile, bmedian, c75th percentile are shown for Estrogen Receptor (ER) and Progesterone Receptor (PR).
Figure 1Expression of CCL2/CCR2 related signaling proteins are elevated in DCIS and further upregulated in IDC patient tissues. TMAs containing DCIS (n = 72), IDC (n = 74) or normal adjacent breast tissues to DCIS (NA DCIS) (n = 25) or to IDC (NA IDC) (n = 61) were immunostained with antibodies to: (A) CCL2, (B) CCR2, (C) phospho-SMAD3 or (D) phospho-p42/44MAPK. Scale bar = 200 microns. Immunostaining was quantified by Image J. Whisker box plots are shown. Whiskers indicate min and max values. Box indicates upper and lower quartile range. Line indicates median. Statistical analysis for DCIS vs. IDC was performed using Mann–Whitney–Wilcoxon Test. Statistical analyses for NA DCIS vs. DCIS and NA IDC vs. IDC were performed using Wilcoxon Signed Rank Test. Statistical significance analysis was determined by p < 0.05. ns not significant. Scale bar = 200 microns.
Profile of de-identified patient samples used in mammary intraductal injection studies.
| Patient sample | Diagnosis | Biomarker | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ER | PR | HER2 | ||
| IC-041717-1 | DCIS low grade | + 100% | + 40% | NA |
| IC-031317 | DCIS high grade, comedo/solid | + 5% | − | NA |
| IC-022316 | DCIS intermediate grade, micropapillary/sold | + 99% | + 68% | + |
Patient diagnosis, ER, PR, HER2 data were provided in pathology reports. IC-041717-1 and IC-031317 were obtained by needle core biopsy. IC-022316 were obtained through surgical biopsy.
NA information not available.
Figure 2CCL2-mediated progression of patient derived breast xenografts is associated with increased CCR2, phospho-SMAD3 and phospho-p42/44MAPK expression. N = 4 mice (8 mammary fat pads total) were injected each with DCIS cells from patients IC-041717-1 and IC-031317. N = 2 mice (4 mammary fats total) were injected with DCIS cells from patient IC-022316. Mice were treated with placebo or recombinant CCL2 for up to 22 weeks. Primary breast xenografts were co-immunofluoresence stained for CK5/CK19 (red) with (A) α-sma, (B) PCNA, (C) CCR2, (D) phospho-SMAD3 (green) or E. phospho-p42/44MAPK (red). Sections were counter stained with DAPI. Representative images are shown for case no. IC-031317 with CK5/CK19 overlay with α-sma, PCNA or CCR2, and DAPI overlay with phospho-SMAD3 or phospho-p42/44MAPK expression. Blue arrows point to invasive carcinoma cells, characterized by absence of α-sma staining and presence of cancer cells in the peri-ductal stroma. White arrows point to positive PCNA staining. Scale bar = 200 microns. Sample size of mammary lesions per group are shown below the last graph. Invasiveness was scored for lesions co-stained for α-sma/CK5/19. Expression was quantified by Image J. Stacked bar graph is shown is shown for percentage of invasive and non-invasive lesions (A). Whisker box plots are shown for (B–E). Whiskers indicate min and max values. Box indicates upper and lower quartile range. Line indicates median. Statistical analysis was performed using Chi Square Test (A) or Two tailed T-test (B–E). Statistical significance analysis was determined by p < 0.05. ns not significant.
Figure 3CCR2+ hDCIS.01 breast cancer cells show increased formation of invasive mammary lesions. (A) hDCIS.01 cells were magnetically sorted for CCR2 expression (CCR2+), and analyzed by flow cytometry for CCR2 expression 4 weeks post-enrichment. (B) Parental or CCR2+ cells were injected into the mammary ducts of NOD-SCID mice. Mice were palpated for tumor formation twice weekly. Tumor formation was plotted as a function of percent tumor free over time. Parental n = 14, CCR2+ n = 12. (C) H&E stain of mammary lesions from matching CCR2+ lesions and parental control harvested 75 days post-injection. (D) Cell proliferation was analyzed by PCNA immunostaining, normalized to hematoxylin staining. Whisker box plots are shown. Whiskers indicate min and max values. Box indicates upper and lower quartile range. Line indicates median. (E) Invasiveness was scored for lesions co-stained for α-sma/CK5/19. Statistical analysis was performed using Log Rank (Mantel-Cox) Test (B), One Way ANOVA with Bonferroni post-hoc comparison (D) or Chi Square test (E). Statistical significance was determined by p < 0.05. Scale bar = 200 microns.
Figure 4hDCIS.01 xenografts enriched for CCR2 expression show increased CCL2, phospho-SMAD3 and phospho-p42/44MAPK expression. hDCIS.01 xenografts were immunostained for expression of: (A) CCL2, (B) CCR2, (C) phospho-SMAD3 or (D) phospho-p42/44MAPK. Normal adjacent tissues were from parental lesions. Normal adjacent n = 12, parental n = 14, CCR2+ n = 12. Expression was quantified by Image J. Statistical analysis was performed using One Way ANOVA with Bonferroni post-hoc comparison. Whisker box plots are shown. Whiskers indicate min and max values. Box indicates upper and lower quartile range. Line indicates median. Statistical significance was determined by p < 0.05. Scale bar = 200 microns.