| Literature DB >> 36118583 |
Jacob C Holter1, Chia-Wen Chang2, Alex Avendano1, Ayush A Garg3, Ajeet K Verma4,5, Manish Charan4, Dinesh K Ahirwar4,6, Ramesh K Ganju4,5, Jonathan W Song3,5.
Abstract
Cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) play an active role in remodeling the local tumor stroma to support tumor initiation, growth, invasion, metastasis, and therapeutic resistance. The CAF-secreted chemokine, CXCL12, has been directly implicated in the tumorigenic progression of carcinomas, including breast cancer. Using a 3-D in vitro microfluidic-based microtissue model, we demonstrate that stromal CXCL12 secreted by CAFs has a potent effect on increasing the vascular permeability of local blood microvessel analogues through paracrine signaling. Moreover, genetic deletion of fibroblast-specific CXCL12 significantly reduced vessel permeability compared to CXCL12 secreting CAFs within the recapitulated tumor microenvironment (TME). We suspected that fibroblast-mediated extracellular matrix (ECM) remodeling and contraction indirectly accounted for this change in vessel permeability. To this end, we investigated the autocrine effects of CXCL12 on fibroblast contractility and determined that antagonistic blocking of CXCL12 did not have a substantial effect on ECM contraction. Our findings indicate that fibroblast-secreted CXCL12 has a significant role in promoting a leakier endothelium hospitable to angiogenesis and tumor cell intravasation; however, autocrine CXCL12 is not the primary upstream trigger of CAF contractility.Entities:
Keywords: cancer-associated fibroblast; collagen hydrogel; microfluidics; microtissue analogue; paracrine signaling; tumor microenvironment
Year: 2022 PMID: 36118583 PMCID: PMC9478647 DOI: 10.3389/fbioe.2022.888431
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Bioeng Biotechnol ISSN: 2296-4185
FIGURE 1Molecular characterization of fibroblasts isolated from mouse mammary glands. (A,B) Representative confocal images of cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) by immunofluorescence (IF) staining of CXCL12 (green) and PDGFR-α (red for A) and Nidogen-2 (red for B). Nuclei (blue) were counterstained with DAPI. Scale bars are 20 µm. (C) Quantification of fluorescence intensity of PDGFR-α and Nidogen-2 per cell from confocal IF images. Values represent the mean ± standard deviation, with n = 4 technical replicates: *p ≤ 0.05, **p ≤ 0.01, ***p < 0.001 from unpaired t-test. (D) Western blot analysis of CXCR4 from fibroblast lysates derived from mouse mammary glands. f/f: floxed control allele MMFs, ∆/∆: CXCL12-knockout MMFs, f/f; PyT: CAFs from tumor-bearing mammary glands of Cxcl12f/f;PyT mice. CXCR4 expression is preserved in the CXCL12 genetically ablated fibroblasts and robust in CAFs.
FIGURE 2Compartmentalized microfluidic device for vascular permeability measurements. (A) Schematic of microtissue analogue microfluidic device. (B) Dashed boxed region in (A) depicting endothelial cell-lined microchannel laterally adjacent to a central stromal compartment containing fibroblasts embedded in a 3-D type I collagen gel. Arrows depict the endothelial-stromal compartment interface. (C) Texas Red-conjugated Dextran (70 kDa) dissolved in media served as a fluorescent tracer and was introduced into the MEEC-lined channel. The fluorescent tracer passes through the endothelial monolayer of the microvessel analogue and enters the stromal compartment by diffusion. Scale bars are 50 µm. (D) Changes in fluorescence intensity within the stromal compartment were used to calculate apparent vascular permeability of vessels in the presence of conditioned media (CM) or co-cultured with CAFs—with and without Cxcl12 gene deletion. Reported values represent the mean ± standard deviation, with n ≥ 3 biological replicates and at least 15 apertures analyzed for each condition: *p ≤ 0.05, **p ≤ 0.01, ***p < 0.001.
FIGURE 3Collagen gel contraction assay to determine fibroblast contractility. (A) Percent contraction of normal mouse mammary gland fibroblasts (f/f) and CAFs (f/f; PyT) harvested from PyT tumor-induced mice, with and without the pharmacological CXCR4 inhibitor, AMD3100 (AMD). CAFs exhibit greater contractility compared to their normal counterparts by 48 h. AMD did not have a statistically significant effect on fibroblast contraction, although a slight reduction in mean contraction is observed for both cell lines. Reported values represent the mean ± standard deviation, with n = 4 technical replicates for each condition: *p ≤ 0.05, **p ≤ 0.01, ***p < 0.001. (B) Representative images of fibroblast-laden collagen gels under stereo microscope after 72 h of contraction. Scale bar is 2 mm.