| Literature DB >> 36224342 |
Raquel Blazquez1,2, Han-Ning Chuang2, Britta Wenske2, Laura Trigueros1, Darius Wlochowitz3, Renato Liguori4,5, Fulvia Ferrazzi4,5, Tommy Regen6,7, Martin A Proescholdt8, Veit Rohde9, Markus J Riemenschneider10, Christine Stadelmann6, Annalen Bleckmann2,11, Tim Beißbarth3, Denise van Rossum6,12, Uwe K Hanisch6, Tobias Pukrop13,14,15.
Abstract
Brain metastasis in breast cancer remains difficult to treat and its incidence is increasing. Therefore, the development of new therapies is of utmost clinical relevance. Recently, toll-like receptor (TLR) 4 was correlated with IL6 expression and poor prognosis in 1 215 breast cancer primaries. In contrast, we demonstrated that TLR4 stimulation reduces microglia-assisted breast cancer cell invasion. However, the expression, prognostic value, or therapeutic potential of TLR signaling in breast cancer brain metastasis have not been investigated. We thus tested the prognostic value of various TLRs in two brain-metastasis gene sets. Furthermore, we investigated different TLR agonists, as well as MyD88 and TRIF-deficient microenvironments in organotypic brain-slice ex vivo co-cultures and in vivo colonization experiments. These experiments underline the ambiguous roles of TLR4, its adapter MyD88, and the target nitric oxide (NO) during brain colonization. Moreover, analysis of the gene expression datasets of breast cancer brain metastasis patients revealed associations of TLR1 and IL6 with poor overall survival. Finally, our finding that a single LPS application at the onset of colonization shapes the later microglia/macrophage reaction at the macro-metastasis brain-parenchyma interface (MMPI) and reduces metastatic infiltration into the brain parenchyma may prove useful in immunotherapeutic considerations.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36224342 DOI: 10.1038/s41388-022-02496-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncogene ISSN: 0950-9232 Impact factor: 8.756