| Literature DB >> 35378690 |
Cédric Zeltz1, Roya Navab2, Ritva Heljasvaara3, Marion Kusche-Gullberg1, Ning Lu1, Ming-Sound Tsao2,4, Donald Gullberg5.
Abstract
There is currently an increased interest in understanding the role of the tumor microenvironment (TME) in tumor growth and progression. In this context the role of integrins in cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) will need to be carefully re-evaluated. Fibroblast-derived cells are not only in the focus in tumors, but also in tissue fibrosis as well as in inflammatory conditions. The recent transcriptional profiling of what has been called "the pan-fibroblast cell lineage" in mouse and human tissues has identified novel transcriptional biomarker mRNAs encoding the secreted ECM proteins dermatopontin and collagen XV as well as the phosphatidylinositol-anchored membrane protein Pi16. Some of the genes identified in these fibroblasts scRNA-seq datasets will be useful for rigorous comparative characterizations of fibroblast-derived cell subpopulations. At the same time, it will be a challenge in the coming years to validate these transcriptional mRNA datasets at the protein-(expression) and at tissue-(distribution) levels and to find useful protein biomarker reagents that will facilitate fibroblast profiling at the cell level. In the current review we will focus on the role of the collagen-binding integrin α11β1 in CAFs, summarizing our own work as well as published datasets with information on α11 mRNA expression in selected tumors. Our experimental data suggest that α11β1 is more than just another biomarker and that it as a functional collagen receptor in the TME is playing a central role in regulating collagen assembly and matrix remodeling, which in turn impact tumor growth and metastasis.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer therapy; Cancer-associated fibroblast; Fibrosis; Integrin; Tumor microenvironment
Year: 2022 PMID: 35378690 PMCID: PMC8978763 DOI: 10.1007/s12079-022-00673-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cell Commun Signal ISSN: 1873-9601 Impact factor: 5.782
Fig. 1Cancer-associated fibroblasts. Cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) are activated fibroblasts, which are called myofibroblasts when they harbor myofibroblastic features such as α-SMA expression. They are mainly derived from resident fibroblasts but can also be contributed from stellate cells in the context of liver and pancreatic cancer (as well as other cell types such as adipocytes and endothelial cells). Tumor cells by secreting soluble factors could initiate fibroblast activation and myofibroblast differentiation. Activated fibroblasts can differentiate into myofibroblasts and this process has been shown to be reversible in a pancreatic cancer model. Myofibroblastic CAFs are mainly involved in the deposition and reorganization of the extracellular matrix (ECM) in the tumor stroma to induce stiffness and linearized matrix fibrils, which in turn promote tumor growth, cell invasion and metastasis. A stiff ECM can also act as a barrier to prevent therapeutic agent delivery to the tumor and prevent access of immune cells. However, in a different tissue context, CAF-mediated organized ECM can restrain tumor growth and invasion. In parallel of myofibroblast activity, activated fibroblasts secrete different soluble factors (growth factors (GF), cytokines) that can promote tumor growth and invasion, immune suppression by recruiting tumor-associated regulatory T cells (Tregs) and myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs) and chemoresistance, e.g., via the compensation of signaling pathways and drug efflux
Role of integrin α11β1 and selected CAF integrin-related effectors in desmoplastic tumors
| Tumor type | Effector | Experimental model | Role | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Non-small cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC) | α11β1 integrin | - Itga11−/− SCID mouse model | - α11−/− SCID mice exhibit growth inhibition of A549 NSCLC cells and reduced metastasis - α11 regulates expression of LOXL1, a matrix cross-linking enzyme | Navab et al. ( |
| Integrin β-like 1 (ITGBL1) | Experimental metastasis mouse model using extracellular vesicles (ECV) from colorectal cancer cells | ITGBL1 in ECV activates lung fibroblasts to establish a premetastatic niche for colon cancer cells | Ji et al. ( | |
| Breast cancer | α11β1 integrin | - PyMT//Itga11−/− mouse model | - α11−/− PyMT mice display inhibition of breast tumor growth and metastasis - α11−/− CAFs deficient in collagen matrix remodeling | Primac et al. ( |
| αvβ3 integrin | - In vitro CAFs isolated from mice - In vivo breast cancer mouse models | A novel drug, ProAgio, induces apoptosis in αvβ3 integrin expressing CAF, reducing collagen synthesis, angiogenesis and tumor cell growth | Sharma et al. ( | |
| β4 integrin (ITGB4) | - In vivo co-transplant mouse model - In vitro isolated CAF from patients | ITGB4 induces mitophagy in CAFs to support tumor growth and invasion | Sung et al. ( | |
| Hic-5 | In vitro CAFs derived from PyMT mice | - Hic-5 regulates CAF-mediated ECM remodeling via α5β1 integrin - Hic-5 is associated with poor survival related to metastasis | Goreczny et al. ( | |
| Osteopontin (OPN) | - In vitro primary mouse fibroblasts - In vivo xenograft mouse model | - OPN supports tumorigenesis - OPN stimulates CAF myofibroblastic phenotype to induce EMT in tumor cells | Sharon et al. ( | |
| Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) | α11β1 integrin | In vitro cultured Pancreatic stellate cells (PCS) | Knockdown of α11 in PSC inhibits CAF activation and PDAC cell invasion in vitro | Schnittert et al. ( |
| β5 integrins / iRGD peptide | - In vitro CAFs isolated from PDAC patients - In vivo mouse model | - β5 integrins are induced in PDAC cells in response to CAF-mediated TGF-β secretion - iRGD peptide achieves highly tumor-specific drug delivery in β5 integrins expressing PDAC | Hurtado de Mendoza et al. ( | |
| Matrix stiffness | - In vitro cultured PCS - In vivo xenograft mouse model | Matrix stiffness drives CAF autophagy to create a pro-tumorigenic niche | Hupfer et al. ( |
CAF cancer-associated fibroblast, ECM extracellular matrix, EMT epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition, PyMT polyoma middle T antigen, SCID severe combined immunodeficiency
Fig. 2Integrin α11 expression in CAF heterogeneity. Main cancer-associated fibroblast (CAF) subpopulations of lung adenocarcinoma (LUAD), pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) and breast cancer are represented based on scRNA-seq dataset from Kim et al., 2020, Dominguez et al., 2020 and Bartoschek et al., 2018, respectively. For each subset of CAFs, the name is underlined and some specific markers are given. In LUAD, integrin α11 (ITGA11) mRNA is mainly observed in the myofibroblast cluster and in few cells of the COL14A1+ matrix fibroblast subset. In the mouse model of PDAC, integrin α11 (Itga11) mRNA is found in the Lrrc15+ c2 CAF subpopulation, with myofibroblastic features, which derived from the c1 CAF subset, which itself evolved from the c4 tissue fibroblast population, driven by TGF-β signaling. In parallel, IL-1 drive the evolution of c3 fibroblast subpopulation to c0 and then to the c8 inflammatory CAF subset. In the mouse breast cancer model, integrin α11 (Itga11) mRNA is mostly observed in the matrix CAF subpopulation, thought to derive from resident fibroblasts. Few cells from the “developmental CAF” subset, suggested to be malignant cells that have undergone epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT), are Itga11+