| Literature DB >> 33905375 |
Sonakshi Bhattacharjee1, Florian Hamberger2, Aashreya Ravichandra1, Maximilian Miller3, Ajay Nair1, Silvia Affo1, Aveline Filliol1, LiKang Chin4, Thomas M Savage5, Deqi Yin1, Naita Maren Wirsik6, Adam Mehal1, Nicholas Arpaia5,7, Ekihiro Seki8, Matthias Mack9, Di Zhu10, Peter A Sims11, Raghu Kalluri12, Ben Z Stanger4, Kenneth P Olive1, Thomas Schmidt6, Rebecca G Wells4, Ingmar Mederacke2, Robert F Schwabe1,13.
Abstract
Cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAF) may exert tumor-promoting and tumor-suppressive functions, but the mechanisms underlying these opposing effects remain elusive. Here, we sought to understand these potentially opposing functions by interrogating functional relationships among CAF subtypes, their mediators, desmoplasia, and tumor growth in a wide range of tumor types metastasizing to the liver, the most common organ site for metastasis. Depletion of hepatic stellate cells (HSC), which represented the main source of CAF in mice and patients in our study, or depletion of all CAF decreased tumor growth and mortality in desmoplastic colorectal and pancreatic metastasis but not in nondesmoplastic metastatic tumors. Single-cell RNA-Seq in conjunction with CellPhoneDB ligand-receptor analysis, as well as studies in immune cell-depleted and HSC-selective knockout mice, uncovered direct CAF-tumor interactions as a tumor-promoting mechanism, mediated by myofibroblastic CAF-secreted (myCAF-secreted) hyaluronan and inflammatory CAF-secreted (iCAF-secreted) HGF. These effects were opposed by myCAF-expressed type I collagen, which suppressed tumor growth by mechanically restraining tumor spread, overriding its own stiffness-induced mechanosignals. In summary, mechanical restriction by type I collagen opposes the overall tumor-promoting effects of CAF, thus providing a mechanistic explanation for their dual functions in cancer. Therapeutic targeting of tumor-promoting CAF mediators while preserving type I collagen may convert CAF from tumor promoting to tumor restricting.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer; Collagens; Fibrosis; Hepatology; Oncology
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33905375 PMCID: PMC8159701 DOI: 10.1172/JCI146987
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Invest ISSN: 0021-9738 Impact factor: 14.808