| Literature DB >> 35971182 |
Hao Peng1, Erwei Zhu2, Yewei Zhang3.
Abstract
Liver cancer is one of the most common malignant tumors worldwide, it is ranked sixth in incidence and fourth in mortality. According to the distinct origin of malignant tumor cells, liver cancer is mainly divided into hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and cholangiocarcinoma (CCA). Since most cases are diagnosed at an advanced stage, the prognosis of liver cancer is poor. Tumor growth depends on the dynamic interaction of various cellular components in the tumor microenvironment (TME). As the most abundant components of tumor stroma, cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) have been involved in the progression of liver cancer. The interplay between CAFs and tumor cells, immune cells, or vascular endothelial cells in the TME through direct cell-to-cell contact or indirect paracrine interaction, affects the initiation and development of tumors. Additionally, CAFs are not a homogeneous cell population in liver cancer. Recently, single-cell sequencing technology has been used to help better understand the diversity of CAFs in liver cancer. In this review, we mainly update the knowledge of CAFs both in HCC and CCA, including their cell origins, chemoresistance, tumor stemness induction, tumor immune microenvironment formation, and the role of tumor cells on CAFs. Understanding the context-dependent role of different CAFs subsets provides new strategies for precise liver cancer treatment.Entities:
Keywords: CCA; HCC; Liver cancer; cancer-associated fibroblasts
Year: 2022 PMID: 35971182 PMCID: PMC9380339 DOI: 10.1186/s40364-022-00406-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomark Res ISSN: 2050-7771
Fig. 1Morphological manifestations of fibroblasts in HCC. A CAFs and NFs extracted from HCC tissue and normal liver tissue were identified by immunofluorescence staining for α-SMA and Vimentin. CAFs exhibited more abundant cytoplasmic content than NFs. B Representative graphs showed two HCC cases with different α-SMA + CAFs distribution densities, with case1 exhibiting more rich CAFs infiltration relative to case2. Peng, H., R. Xue, Z. Ju, J. Qiu, J. Wang, W. Yan, et al., Ann Transl Med, 2020. 8(14): 856
CAFs subclusters identified in liver cancer
| Sample origins | CAFs subclusters | Signature genes or characteristics | Genes enrichment pathway |
|---|---|---|---|
| HCC [ | CAF_VSMC | RGS5, NDUFA4L2, MYH11,CNN1 | signatures of smooth muscle vascular cells |
| CAF_HSC | PDGFRB, THY1 | signatures of hepatic stellate cells | |
| CAF_Port | PDGFRA, MMP23B, COL1A1, PRELP | signatures of portal fibroblasts | |
| ICC [ | myCAF | COL1A1, ACTA2, COL8A1, COL15A1, CRLF1, FBN2, SERPINF1 | ECM pathways; |
| ICC proliferation; | |||
| intraneural invasion | |||
| iCAF | CCL19 CCL21, IL6, RGS5 | inflammatory, growth factor; antigen-presentation genes; | |
| receptor-ligand, growth factor, and cytokine activity pathways | |||
| mesCAF | ANXA1, ANXA2, CXCL1 CXCL6 | mesothelial markers | |
| ICC [ | Subcluster 0 (vCAFs) | CD146, MYH11, GJA4, RGS5, IL-6, CCL8 | microvessels and inflammatory chemokines signature |
| Subcluster 1 (mCAFs) | COL5A1, COL5A2, COL6A3, POSTN, FN1, LUM, DCN, and VCAN | ECM pathways; | |
| collagen fibril organization | |||
| Subcluster 2 (iCAFs) | FBLN1, IGFI, CXCL1, IGFBP6, SLPI, SAA1, C3, C7 | inflammatory response regulation; | |
| complement activation | |||
| Subcluster 3 (apCAFs) | CD74, HLA-DRA, HLA-DRB1 | leukocyte cell–cell adhesion; response to IFN-c; | |
| antigen processing; | |||
| antigen presentation via MHC-II | |||
| Subcluster 4 (eCAFs) | KRT19, KRT8, SAA1 | EMT | |
| Subcluster 5 (lipofibroblast) | APOA2, FABP1, FABP4, and FRZB | lipid metabolism and processing | |
| Liver metastasis [ | myCAF | ACTA2, COL1A1, COL1A2, COL1A3, COL15A1, MMP2 | ECM pathways |
| iCAF | HGF, BMP10, GDF2, LFITM1 | growth factor and inflammatory genes | |
| mesCAF | MSLN, UPK1B, UPK3B, GPM6A | mesothelial markers |
Interactions between CAFs and TILs in the TME of liver cancer
| TAMs | CXCL12; | CXCL12/CXCR4–PAI-1; | M2 polarization of TAMs; | [ | |
| GAS6 | Endosialin-CD68 | macrophage recruitment and polarization | [ | ||
| TANs | SDF1a; | IL6/STAT3-PDL1; | Chemotaxis of TAN; | [ | |
| CLCF1 | CLCF1 − CXCL6/TGF-β | TAN infiltration and polarization | [ | ||
| NK cells | PGE2, IDO | - | Inducing deactivation of NK cells | [ | |
| DCs | SDF-1α | IL-6/STAT3-IDO | Induction into rDC / promotion of Tregs expansion | [ | |
| MDSCs | SDF1a; | IL-6/STAT3; | Inducing monocytes to differentiate into MDSCs / Impairing T cells function | [ | |
| M-CSF, MCP-1; | -; | [ | |||
| COX-2; PGE2 | ERK/COX2/PGE2 | [ | |||
| MDSCs | CCL2; | FAP-STAT3-CCL2; | Recruitment of MDSC; | [ | |
| IL-6, IL-33 | 5-LO/LTB4-BLT2 | Enhancing the stemness capacity of MDSCs | [ | ||
| TANs | CXCL5 | PI3K-AKT and ERK1/2 | Recruitment of CD66b + TANs | [ | |
| Tregs | - | - | CAV1 + CAFs positively correlated with Foxp3 + TIL | [ |
Fig. 2The origin and the role of CAFs in liver cancer. Schematic illustration of potential cellular origins of CAFs, including epithelial cells, endothelial cells, tumor cells, HSCs, portal fibroblasts, and MSCs. The upper part of the picture shows the the influence exerted by CAFs in the TME, including chemoresistance, stemness induction, tumor immune, angiogenesis, and aggressiveness
The effects and mechanisms of CAFs on HCC cells/CCA cells
| HGF | CAF-derived HGF enhances the resistance of HCC cells to sorafenib and cisplatin by upregulating the expression of CD73 [ | PIGF | Antagonizing CAF-secreted PIGF can alleviate chemoresistance effects [ | |
| CAFs-supernatants | CAF supernatant induces RCN1 expression in HCC cells, thereby enhancing resistance to sorafenib via the IRE1α-XBP1s pathway [ | IGF2 | CAFs-secreted IGF2 stimulated IR/IGF1R signaling activation in erlotinib-resistant CCA cells [ | |
| IL6 | CAF-secreted IL6 attenuates the sensitivity of CCA cells to chemotherapeutic drugs by inhibiting autophagy in CCA cells [ | |||
| IL6 | CAFs-secreted HGF and IL6 enhanced stemness of CD24 + HCC cells through activated STAT3 pathway [ | IL6 | CD146-positive vascular CAFs (vCAFs)-secreted IL6 enhanced the stemness of CCA [ | |
| HGF | CAFs-derived HGF enhanced stemness via (ERK)1/2–FRA1–HEY1 pathway [ | MDSCs | CAFs indirectly regulated tumor stemness by recruiting MDSCs in the TME of CCA [ | |
| HGF induces KRT19 expression in HCC cells via the MET-ERK1/2-AP1 and SP1 axis, thereby promoting stemness maintenance [ | ||||
| FSTL1 | CAFs-derived FSTL1 promoted the stemness through the AKT/mTOR/4EBP1 signaling pathways [ | |||
| CLCF1 | CAF-secreted CLCF1 enhances stemness by promoting the secretion of CXCL6 and TGF in HCC cells [ | |||
| FOXQ1 | CAF promotes HCC initiation via the FOXQ1/NDRG1 axis [ | |||
| RvD1 | RvD1 inhibits CAF-secreted COMP to antagonize the stemness effect via FPR2/ROS/FOXM1 signaling [ | |||
| VEGF | CAFs-derived VEGF promote the angiogenesis via EZH2 /VASH1 pathway [ | VEGF | VEGF secreted by CAFs promoted the chemotaxis and assembly of lymphatic endothelial cells [ | |
| PIGF | CD90 positive CAFs have a strong correlation with PIGF expression in HCC tissues [ | PIGF | PIGF produced by CAFs could compress the tumor vessel and deteriorate the hypoxic state in CCA [ | |
| TGF-β and SDF1 | CAFs-derived TGF-β and SDF1 facilitated VM formation [ | |||
| prolargin | CAFs-secreted prolargin inhibited the angiogenesis of HCC [ | |||
| SPARCL1 | SPARCL1-positive fibroblasts could maintain the self-stabilization of blood vessels [ | |||