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1.
Nature ; 620(7976): 1080-1088, 2023 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37612508

RESUMO

Chromosomal instability (CIN) is a driver of cancer metastasis1-4, yet the extent to which this effect depends on the immune system remains unknown. Using ContactTracing-a newly developed, validated and benchmarked tool to infer the nature and conditional dependence of cell-cell interactions from single-cell transcriptomic data-we show that CIN-induced chronic activation of the cGAS-STING pathway promotes downstream signal re-wiring in cancer cells, leading to a pro-metastatic tumour microenvironment. This re-wiring is manifested by type I interferon tachyphylaxis selectively downstream of STING and a corresponding increase in cancer cell-derived endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress response. Reversal of CIN, depletion of cancer cell STING or inhibition of ER stress response signalling abrogates CIN-dependent effects on the tumour microenvironment and suppresses metastasis in immune competent, but not severely immune compromised, settings. Treatment with STING inhibitors reduces CIN-driven metastasis in melanoma, breast and colorectal cancers in a manner dependent on tumour cell-intrinsic STING. Finally, we show that CIN and pervasive cGAS activation in micronuclei are associated with ER stress signalling, immune suppression and metastasis in human triple-negative breast cancer, highlighting a viable strategy to identify and therapeutically intervene in tumours spurred by CIN-induced inflammation.


Assuntos
Instabilidade Cromossômica , Progressão da Doença , Neoplasias , Humanos , Benchmarking , Comunicação Celular , Neoplasias Colorretais/tratamento farmacológico , Neoplasias Colorretais/genética , Neoplasias Colorretais/imunologia , Neoplasias Colorretais/patologia , Melanoma/tratamento farmacológico , Melanoma/genética , Melanoma/imunologia , Melanoma/patologia , Microambiente Tumoral , Interferon Tipo I/imunologia , Metástase Neoplásica , Estresse do Retículo Endoplasmático , Transdução de Sinais , Neoplasias de Mama Triplo Negativas/tratamento farmacológico , Neoplasias de Mama Triplo Negativas/genética , Neoplasias de Mama Triplo Negativas/imunologia , Neoplasias de Mama Triplo Negativas/patologia , Neoplasias/genética , Neoplasias/imunologia , Neoplasias/patologia
2.
Nature ; 553(7689): 467-472, 2018 01 25.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29342134

RESUMO

Chromosomal instability is a hallmark of cancer that results from ongoing errors in chromosome segregation during mitosis. Although chromosomal instability is a major driver of tumour evolution, its role in metastasis has not been established. Here we show that chromosomal instability promotes metastasis by sustaining a tumour cell-autonomous response to cytosolic DNA. Errors in chromosome segregation create a preponderance of micronuclei whose rupture spills genomic DNA into the cytosol. This leads to the activation of the cGAS-STING (cyclic GMP-AMP synthase-stimulator of interferon genes) cytosolic DNA-sensing pathway and downstream noncanonical NF-κB signalling. Genetic suppression of chromosomal instability markedly delays metastasis even in highly aneuploid tumour models, whereas continuous chromosome segregation errors promote cellular invasion and metastasis in a STING-dependent manner. By subverting lethal epithelial responses to cytosolic DNA, chromosomally unstable tumour cells co-opt chronic activation of innate immune pathways to spread to distant organs.


Assuntos
Instabilidade Cromossômica , Citosol/metabolismo , DNA de Neoplasias/metabolismo , Metástase Neoplásica/genética , Animais , Neoplasias Encefálicas/genética , Neoplasias Encefálicas/patologia , Neoplasias Encefálicas/secundário , Neoplasias da Mama/genética , Neoplasias da Mama/patologia , Neoplasias da Mama/secundário , Carcinoma de Células Escamosas/genética , Carcinoma de Células Escamosas/patologia , Linhagem Celular , Instabilidade Cromossômica/genética , Segregação de Cromossomos , Citosol/enzimologia , Feminino , Neoplasias de Cabeça e Pescoço/genética , Neoplasias de Cabeça e Pescoço/patologia , Humanos , Inflamação/genética , Inflamação/metabolismo , Proteínas de Membrana/metabolismo , Mesoderma/metabolismo , Camundongos , Micronúcleos com Defeito Cromossômico , NF-kappa B/metabolismo , Nucleotidiltransferases/metabolismo , Ensaios Antitumorais Modelo de Xenoenxerto
3.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 117(49): 31448-31458, 2020 12 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33229571

RESUMO

Adult neural stem cells (NSC) serve as a reservoir for brain plasticity and origin for certain gliomas. Lineage tracing and genomic approaches have portrayed complex underlying heterogeneity within the major anatomical location for NSC, the subventricular zone (SVZ). To gain a comprehensive profile of NSC heterogeneity, we utilized a well-validated stem/progenitor-specific reporter transgene in concert with single-cell RNA sequencing to achieve unbiased analysis of SVZ cells from infancy to advanced age. The magnitude and high specificity of the resulting transcriptional datasets allow precise identification of the varied cell types embedded in the SVZ including specialized parenchymal cells (neurons, glia, microglia) and noncentral nervous system cells (endothelial, immune). Initial mining of the data delineates four quiescent NSC and three progenitor-cell subpopulations formed in a linear progression. Further evidence indicates that distinct stem and progenitor populations reside in different regions of the SVZ. As stem/progenitor populations progress from neonatal to advanced age, they acquire a deficiency in transition from quiescence to proliferation. Further data mining identifies stage-specific biological processes, transcription factor networks, and cell-surface markers for investigation of cellular identities, lineage relationships, and key regulatory pathways in adult NSC maintenance and neurogenesis.


Assuntos
Envelhecimento/genética , Linhagem da Célula , Ventrículos Laterais/anatomia & histologia , Ventrículos Laterais/citologia , Nicho de Células-Tronco/genética , Transcriptoma/genética , Células-Tronco Adultas/citologia , Células-Tronco Adultas/metabolismo , Animais , Biomarcadores/metabolismo , Linhagem da Célula/genética , Proteínas de Fluorescência Verde/metabolismo , Humanos , Camundongos , Células-Tronco Neurais/citologia , Células-Tronco Neurais/metabolismo , Transgenes
4.
Br J Cancer ; 124(9): 1491-1502, 2021 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33731858

RESUMO

Most cancer deaths are caused by metastasis: recurrence of disease by disseminated tumour cells at sites distant from the primary tumour. Large numbers of disseminated tumour cells are released from the primary tumour, even during the early stages of tumour growth. However, only a minority survive as potential seeds for future metastatic outgrowths. These cells must adapt to a relatively inhospitable microenvironment, evade immune surveillance and progress from the micro- to macro-metastatic stage to generate a secondary tumour. A pervasive driver of this transition is chronic inflammatory signalling emanating from tumour cells themselves. These signals can promote migration and engagement of stem and progenitor cell function, events that are also central to a wound healing response. In this review, we revisit the concept of cancer as a non-healing wound, first introduced by Virchow in the 19th century, with a new tumour cell-intrinsic perspective on inflammation and focus on metastasis. Cellular responses to inflammation in both wound healing and metastasis are tightly regulated by crosstalk with the surrounding microenvironment. Targeting or restoring canonical responses to inflammation could represent a novel strategy to prevent the lethal spread of cancer.


Assuntos
Inflamação/patologia , Neoplasias/patologia , Microambiente Tumoral/imunologia , Cicatrização , Animais , Humanos , Inflamação/imunologia , Metástase Neoplásica , Neoplasias/imunologia , Transdução de Sinais
5.
PLoS Comput Biol ; 14(9): e1006447, 2018 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30204765

RESUMO

Cancer cells frequently undergo chromosome missegregation events during mitosis, whereby the copies of a given chromosome are not distributed evenly among the two daughter cells, thus creating cells with heterogeneous karyotypes. A stochastic model tracing cellular karyotypes derived from clonal populations over hundreds of generations was recently developed and experimentally validated, and it was capable of predicting favorable karyotypes frequently observed in cancer. Here, we construct and study a Markov chain that precisely describes karyotypic evolution during clonally expanding cancer cell populations. The Markov chain allows us to directly predict the distribution of karyotypes and the expected size of the tumor after many cell divisions without resorting to computationally expensive simulations. We determine the limiting karyotype distribution of an evolving tumor population, and quantify its dependency on several key parameters including the initial karyotype of the founder cell, the rate of whole chromosome missegregation, and chromosome-specific cell viability. Using this model, we confirm the existence of an optimal rate of chromosome missegregation probabilities that maximizes karyotypic heterogeneity, while minimizing the occurrence of nullisomy. Interestingly, karyotypic heterogeneity is significantly more dependent on chromosome missegregation probabilities rather than the number of cell divisions, so that maximal heterogeneity can be reached rapidly (within a few hundred generations of cell division) at chromosome missegregation rates commonly observed in cancer cell lines. Conversely, at low missegregation rates, heterogeneity is constrained even after thousands of cell division events. This leads us to conclude that chromosome copy number heterogeneity is primarily constrained by chromosome missegregation rates and the risk for nullisomy and less so by the age of the tumor. This model enables direct integration of karyotype information into existing models of tumor evolution based on somatic mutations.


Assuntos
Instabilidade Cromossômica , Cromossomos , Cariotipagem , Mitose , Neoplasias/genética , Algoritmos , Sobrevivência Celular , Células Cultivadas , Análise Mutacional de DNA , Humanos , Cadeias de Markov , Modelos Estatísticos , Mutação , Neoplasias/patologia , Probabilidade , Processos Estocásticos
6.
Bioconjug Chem ; 25(6): 1137-42, 2014 Jun 18.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24806886

RESUMO

Cellular up-regulation of multidrug resistance protein 1 (MDR1) is a common cause for resistance to chemotherapy; development of third generation MDR1 inhibitors-several of which contain a common 6,7-dimethoxy-2-phenethyl-1,2,3,4-tetrahydroisoquinoline substructure-is underway. Efficacy of these agents has been difficult to ascertain, partly due to a lack of pharmacokinetic reporters for quantifying inhibitor localization and transport dynamics. Some of the recent third generation inhibitors have a pendant heterocycle, for example, a chromone moiety, which we hypothesized could be converted to a fluorophore. Following synthesis and teasing of a small set of analogues, we identified one lead compound that can be used as a cellular imaging agent that exhibits structural similarity and behavior akin to the latest generation of MDR1 inhibitors.


Assuntos
Resistência a Múltiplos Medicamentos/efeitos dos fármacos , Resistencia a Medicamentos Antineoplásicos/efeitos dos fármacos , Corantes Fluorescentes/farmacologia , Tetra-Hidroisoquinolinas/farmacologia , ortoaminobenzoatos/farmacologia , Subfamília B de Transportador de Cassetes de Ligação de ATP/antagonistas & inibidores , Subfamília B de Transportador de Cassetes de Ligação de ATP/genética , Linhagem Celular Tumoral , Relação Dose-Resposta a Droga , Corantes Fluorescentes/química , Humanos , Modelos Moleculares , Estrutura Molecular , Paclitaxel/farmacologia , Relação Estrutura-Atividade , Tetra-Hidroisoquinolinas/química , ortoaminobenzoatos/química
7.
Science ; 383(6683): eadj1415, 2024 Feb 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38330136

RESUMO

Lung adenocarcinoma (LUAD) and small cell lung cancer (SCLC) are thought to originate from different epithelial cell types in the lung. Intriguingly, LUAD can histologically transform into SCLC after treatment with targeted therapies. In this study, we designed models to follow the conversion of LUAD to SCLC and found that the barrier to histological transformation converges on tolerance to Myc, which we implicate as a lineage-specific driver of the pulmonary neuroendocrine cell. Histological transformations are frequently accompanied by activation of the Akt pathway. Manipulating this pathway permitted tolerance to Myc as an oncogenic driver, producing rare, stem-like cells that transcriptionally resemble the pulmonary basal lineage. These findings suggest that histological transformation may require the plasticity inherent to the basal stem cell, enabling tolerance to previously incompatible oncogenic driver programs.


Assuntos
Adenocarcinoma de Pulmão , Neoplasias Pulmonares , Proteínas Proto-Oncogênicas c-akt , Proteínas Proto-Oncogênicas c-myc , Carcinoma de Pequenas Células do Pulmão , Humanos , Adenocarcinoma de Pulmão/genética , Adenocarcinoma de Pulmão/patologia , Adenocarcinoma de Pulmão/terapia , Células Epiteliais/patologia , Pulmão/patologia , Neoplasias Pulmonares/genética , Neoplasias Pulmonares/patologia , Neoplasias Pulmonares/terapia , Carcinoma de Pequenas Células do Pulmão/genética , Carcinoma de Pequenas Células do Pulmão/patologia , Carcinoma de Pequenas Células do Pulmão/terapia , Oncogenes , Linhagem da Célula , Proteínas Proto-Oncogênicas c-myc/genética , Proteínas Proto-Oncogênicas c-akt/genética , Terapia de Alvo Molecular
8.
Science ; 385(6712): eadj8691, 2024 Aug 30.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39208110

RESUMO

Chromosome-containing micronuclei are a hallmark of aggressive cancers. Micronuclei frequently undergo irreversible collapse, exposing their enclosed chromatin to the cytosol. Micronuclear rupture catalyzes chromosomal rearrangements, epigenetic abnormalities, and inflammation, yet mechanisms safeguarding micronuclear integrity are poorly understood. In this study, we found that mitochondria-derived reactive oxygen species (ROS) disrupt micronuclei by promoting a noncanonical function of charged multivesicular body protein 7 (CHMP7), a scaffolding protein for the membrane repair complex known as endosomal sorting complex required for transport III (ESCRT-III). ROS retained CHMP7 in micronuclei while disrupting its interaction with other ESCRT-III components. ROS-induced cysteine oxidation stimulated CHMP7 oligomerization and binding to the nuclear membrane protein LEMD2, disrupting micronuclear envelopes. Furthermore, this ROS-CHMP7 pathological axis engendered chromosome shattering known to result from micronuclear rupture. It also mediated micronuclear disintegrity under hypoxic conditions, linking tumor hypoxia with downstream processes driving cancer progression.


Assuntos
Complexos Endossomais de Distribuição Requeridos para Transporte , Proteínas de Membrana , Micronúcleos com Defeito Cromossômico , Neoplasias , Proteínas Nucleares , Estresse Oxidativo , Humanos , Hipóxia Celular , Cromatina/metabolismo , Cisteína/metabolismo , Complexos Endossomais de Distribuição Requeridos para Transporte/metabolismo , Proteínas de Membrana/metabolismo , Proteínas de Membrana/genética , Mitocôndrias/metabolismo , Neoplasias/genética , Neoplasias/metabolismo , Neoplasias/patologia , Membrana Nuclear/metabolismo , Proteínas Nucleares/metabolismo , Proteínas Nucleares/genética , Oxirredução , Espécies Reativas de Oxigênio/metabolismo , Células HeLa
9.
Nat Cancer ; 5(3): 433-447, 2024 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38286827

RESUMO

Liver metastasis (LM) confers poor survival and therapy resistance across cancer types, but the mechanisms of liver-metastatic organotropism remain unknown. Here, through in vivo CRISPR-Cas9 screens, we found that Pip4k2c loss conferred LM but had no impact on lung metastasis or primary tumor growth. Pip4k2c-deficient cells were hypersensitized to insulin-mediated PI3K/AKT signaling and exploited the insulin-rich liver milieu for organ-specific metastasis. We observed concordant changes in PIP4K2C expression and distinct metabolic changes in 3,511 patient melanomas, including primary tumors, LMs and lung metastases. We found that systemic PI3K inhibition exacerbated LM burden in mice injected with Pip4k2c-deficient cancer cells through host-mediated increase in hepatic insulin levels; however, this circuit could be broken by concurrent administration of an SGLT2 inhibitor or feeding of a ketogenic diet. Thus, this work demonstrates a rare example of metastatic organotropism through co-optation of physiological metabolic cues and proposes therapeutic avenues to counteract these mechanisms.


Assuntos
Neoplasias Hepáticas , Proteínas Proto-Oncogênicas c-akt , Humanos , Camundongos , Animais , Proteínas Proto-Oncogênicas c-akt/metabolismo , Fosfatidilinositol 3-Quinases , Transdução de Sinais , Insulina , Fosfotransferases (Aceptor do Grupo Álcool)/metabolismo
10.
Breast Cancer Res ; 15(4): R61, 2013.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23915805

RESUMO

INTRODUCTION: Nationally, 25% to 50% of patients undergoing lumpectomy for local management of breast cancer require a secondary excision because of the persistence of residual tumor. Intraoperative assessment of specimen margins by frozen-section analysis is not widely adopted in breast-conserving surgery. Here, a new approach to wide-field optical imaging of breast pathology in situ was tested to determine whether the system could accurately discriminate cancer from benign tissues before routine pathological processing. METHODS: Spatial frequency domain imaging (SFDI) was used to quantify near-infrared (NIR) optical parameters at the surface of 47 lumpectomy tissue specimens. Spatial frequency and wavelength-dependent reflectance spectra were parameterized with matched simulations of light transport. Spectral images were co-registered to histopathology in adjacent, stained sections of the tissue, cut in the geometry imaged in situ. A supervised classifier and feature-selection algorithm were implemented to automate discrimination of breast pathologies and to rank the contribution of each parameter to a diagnosis. RESULTS: Spectral parameters distinguished all pathology subtypes with 82% accuracy and benign (fibrocystic disease, fibroadenoma) from malignant (DCIS, invasive cancer, and partially treated invasive cancer after neoadjuvant chemotherapy) pathologies with 88% accuracy, high specificity (93%), and reasonable sensitivity (79%). Although spectral absorption and scattering features were essential components of the discriminant classifier, scattering exhibited lower variance and contributed most to tissue-type separation. The scattering slope was sensitive to stromal and epithelial distributions measured with quantitative immunohistochemistry. CONCLUSIONS: SFDI is a new quantitative imaging technique that renders a specific tissue-type diagnosis. Its combination of planar sampling and frequency-dependent depth sensing is clinically pragmatic and appropriate for breast surgical-margin assessment. This study is the first to apply SFDI to pathology discrimination in surgical breast tissues. It represents an important step toward imaging surgical specimens immediately ex vivo to reduce the high rate of secondary excisions associated with breast lumpectomy procedures.


Assuntos
Neoplasias da Mama/patologia , Carcinoma in Situ/patologia , Espectroscopia de Luz Próxima ao Infravermelho/métodos , Adulto , Idoso , Idoso de 80 Anos ou mais , Biomarcadores Tumorais/metabolismo , Biópsia , Neoplasias da Mama/diagnóstico , Neoplasias da Mama/cirurgia , Carcinoma in Situ/diagnóstico , Feminino , Humanos , Imuno-Histoquímica , Mastectomia Segmentar , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Gradação de Tumores , Prognóstico , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes , Sensibilidade e Especificidade , Carga Tumoral
11.
Opt Express ; 21(2): 2185-94, 2013 Jan 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23389199

RESUMO

A non-contact localized spectroscopic imaging platform has been developed and optimized to scan 1 x 1 cm² square regions of surgically resected breast tissue specimens with ~150-micron resolution. A color corrected, image-space telecentric scanning design maintained a consistent sampling geometry and uniform spot size across the entire imaging field. Theoretical modeling in ZEMAX allowed estimation of the spot size, which is equal at both the center and extreme positions of the field with ~5% variation across the designed waveband, indicating excellent color correction. The spot sizes at the center and an extreme field position were also measured experimentally using the standard knife-edge technique and were found to be within ~8% of the theoretical predictions. Highly localized sampling offered inherent insensitivity to variations in background absorption allowing direct imaging of local scattering parameters, which was validated using a matrix of varying concentrations of Intralipid and blood in phantoms. Four representative, pathologically distinct lumpectomy tissue specimens were imaged, capturing natural variations in tissue scattering response within a given pathology. Variations as high as 60% were observed in the average reflectance and relative scattering power images, which must be taken into account for robust classification performance. Despite this variation, the preliminary data indicates discernible scatter power contrast between the benign vs malignant groups, but reliable discrimination of pathologies within these groups would require investigation into additional contrast mechanisms.


Assuntos
Biomarcadores Tumorais/análise , Neoplasias da Mama/química , Neoplasias da Mama/diagnóstico , Análise Espectral/instrumentação , Desenho de Equipamento , Análise de Falha de Equipamento , Feminino , Humanos , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes , Sensibilidade e Especificidade
12.
Sci Transl Med ; 15(684): eade1857, 2023 02 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36812344

RESUMO

Obesity, defined as a body mass index (BMI) ≥ 30, is an established risk factor for breast cancer among women in the general population after menopause. Whether elevated BMI is a risk factor for women with a germline mutation in BRCA1 or BRCA2 is less clear because of inconsistent findings from epidemiological studies and a lack of mechanistic studies in this population. Here, we show that DNA damage in normal breast epithelia of women carrying a BRCA mutation is positively correlated with BMI and with biomarkers of metabolic dysfunction. In addition, RNA sequencing showed obesity-associated alterations to the breast adipose microenvironment of BRCA mutation carriers, including activation of estrogen biosynthesis, which affected neighboring breast epithelial cells. In breast tissue explants cultured from women carrying a BRCA mutation, we found that blockade of estrogen biosynthesis or estrogen receptor activity decreased DNA damage. Additional obesity-associated factors, including leptin and insulin, increased DNA damage in human BRCA heterozygous epithelial cells, and inhibiting the signaling of these factors with a leptin-neutralizing antibody or PI3K inhibitor, respectively, decreased DNA damage. Furthermore, we show that increased adiposity was associated with mammary gland DNA damage and increased penetrance of mammary tumors in Brca1+/- mice. Overall, our results provide mechanistic evidence in support of a link between elevated BMI and breast cancer development in BRCA mutation carriers. This suggests that maintaining a lower body weight or pharmacologically targeting estrogen or metabolic dysfunction may reduce the risk of breast cancer in this population.


Assuntos
Neoplasias da Mama , Glândulas Mamárias Humanas , Feminino , Humanos , Animais , Camundongos , Mutação em Linhagem Germinativa , Leptina , Glândulas Mamárias Humanas/patologia , Fosfatidilinositol 3-Quinases , Proteína BRCA2 , Proteína BRCA1/genética , Neoplasias da Mama/patologia , Dano ao DNA , Epitélio/patologia , Obesidade , Estrogênios , Mutação , Microambiente Tumoral
13.
Cell Syst ; 14(4): 252-257, 2023 04 19.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37080161

RESUMO

Collective cell behavior contributes to all stages of cancer progression. Understanding how collective behavior emerges through cell-cell interactions and decision-making will advance our understanding of cancer biology and provide new therapeutic approaches. Here, we summarize an interdisciplinary discussion on multicellular behavior in cancer, draw lessons from other scientific disciplines, and identify future directions.


Assuntos
Comportamento de Massa , Neoplasias , Humanos , Comunicação
14.
Nat Commun ; 13(1): 6239, 2022 10 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36266345

RESUMO

The systemic metabolic shifts that occur during aging and the local metabolic alterations of a tumor, its stroma and their communication cooperate to establish a unique tumor microenvironment (TME) fostering cancer progression. Here, we show that methylmalonic acid (MMA), an aging-increased oncometabolite also produced by aggressive cancer cells, activates fibroblasts in the TME, which reciprocally secrete IL-6 loaded extracellular vesicles (EVs) that drive cancer progression, drug resistance and metastasis. The cancer-associated fibroblast (CAF)-released EV cargo is modified as a result of reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation and activation of the canonical and noncanonical TGFß signaling pathways. EV-associated IL-6 functions as a stroma-tumor messenger, activating the JAK/STAT3 and TGFß signaling pathways in tumor cells and promoting pro-aggressive behaviors. Our findings define the role of MMA in CAF activation to drive metastatic reprogramming, unveiling potential therapeutic avenues to target MMA at the nexus of aging, the tumor microenvironment and metastasis.


Assuntos
Fibroblastos Associados a Câncer , Vesículas Extracelulares , Neoplasias , Humanos , Fibroblastos Associados a Câncer/metabolismo , Espécies Reativas de Oxigênio/metabolismo , Ácido Metilmalônico/metabolismo , Interleucina-6/metabolismo , Microambiente Tumoral , Neoplasias/patologia , Vesículas Extracelulares/metabolismo , Fator de Crescimento Transformador beta/metabolismo
15.
Opt Lett ; 36(10): 1911-3, 2011 May 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21593932

RESUMO

A dark-field geometry spectral imaging system is presented to raster scan thick tissue samples in situ in 1.5 cm square sections, recovering full spectra from each 100 µm diameter pixel. This spot size provides adequate resolution for wide field scanning, while also facilitating scatter imaging without requiring sophisticated light-tissue transport modeling. The system is demonstrated showing accurate estimation of localized scatter parameters and the potential to recover absorption-based contrast from broadband reflectance data measured from 480 nm up to 750 nm in tissue phantoms. Results obtained from xenograft pancreas tumors show the ability to quantitatively image changes in localized scatter response in this fast-imaging geometry. The polychromatic raster scan design allows the rapid scanning necessary for use in surgical/clinical applications where timely decisions are required about tissue pathology.


Assuntos
Escuridão , Imagem Molecular/instrumentação , Análise Espectral/instrumentação , Animais , Camundongos , Neoplasias Pancreáticas/patologia
16.
Nat Commun ; 12(1): 5402, 2021 09 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34518527

RESUMO

Chromosomal instability (CIN) and epigenetic alterations have been implicated in tumor progression and metastasis; yet how these two hallmarks of cancer are related remains poorly understood. By integrating genetic, epigenetic, and functional analyses at the single cell level, we show that progression of uveal melanoma (UM), the most common intraocular primary cancer in adults, is driven by loss of Polycomb Repressive Complex 1 (PRC1) in a subpopulation of tumor cells. This leads to transcriptional de-repression of PRC1-target genes and mitotic chromosome segregation errors. Ensuing CIN leads to the formation of rupture-prone micronuclei, exposing genomic double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) to the cytosol. This provokes tumor cell-intrinsic inflammatory signaling, mediated by aberrant activation of the cGAS-STING pathway. PRC1 inhibition promotes nuclear enlargement, induces a transcriptional response that is associated with significantly worse patient survival and clinical outcomes, and enhances migration that is rescued upon pharmacologic inhibition of CIN or STING. Thus, deregulation of PRC1 can promote tumor progression by inducing CIN and represents an opportunity for early therapeutic intervention.


Assuntos
Instabilidade Cromossômica , Perfilação da Expressão Gênica/métodos , Regulação Neoplásica da Expressão Gênica , Melanoma/genética , Complexo Repressor Polycomb 1/genética , Neoplasias Uveais/genética , Linhagem Celular Tumoral , Segregação de Cromossomos/genética , Progressão da Doença , Células HEK293 , Humanos , Melanoma/metabolismo , Melanoma/patologia , Complexo Repressor Polycomb 1/metabolismo , Prognóstico , RNA-Seq/métodos , Transdução de Sinais/genética , Análise de Sobrevida , Neoplasias Uveais/metabolismo , Neoplasias Uveais/patologia
17.
Stem Cell Reports ; 14(2): 338-350, 2020 02 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32004492

RESUMO

Radial glia (RG) cells are the first neural stem cells to appear during embryonic development. Adult human glioblastomas harbor a subpopulation of RG-like cells with typical RG morphology and markers. The cells exhibit the classic and unique mitotic behavior of normal RG in a cell-autonomous manner. Single-cell RNA sequencing analyses of glioblastoma cells reveal transcriptionally dynamic clusters of RG-like cells that share the profiles of normal human fetal radial glia and that reside in quiescent and cycling states. Functional assays show a role for interleukin in triggering exit from dormancy into active cycling, suggesting a role for inflammation in tumor progression. These data are consistent with the possibility of persistence of RG into adulthood and their involvement in tumor initiation or maintenance. They also provide a putative cellular basis for the persistence of normal developmental programs in adult tumors.


Assuntos
Glioblastoma/patologia , Neuroglia/patologia , Adulto , Linhagem Celular Tumoral , Genoma Humano , Humanos , Inflamação/patologia , Mitose , Transdução de Sinais , Transcrição Gênica
18.
Nat Cancer ; 1(1): 28-45, 2020 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32656539

RESUMO

Metastasis-initiating cells with stem-like properties drive cancer lethality, yet their origins and relationship to primary-tumor-initiating stem cells are not known. We show that L1CAM+ cells in human colorectal cancer (CRC) have metastasis-initiating capacity, and we define their relationship to tissue regeneration. L1CAM is not expressed in the homeostatic intestinal epithelium, but is induced and required for epithelial regeneration following colitis and in CRC organoid growth. By using human tissues and mouse models, we show that L1CAM is dispensable for adenoma initiation but required for orthotopic carcinoma propagation, liver metastatic colonization and chemoresistance. L1CAMhigh cells partially overlap with LGR5high stem-like cells in human CRC organoids. Disruption of intercellular epithelial contacts causes E-cadherin-REST transcriptional derepression of L1CAM, switching chemoresistant CRC progenitors from an L1CAMlow to an L1CAMhigh state. Thus, L1CAM dependency emerges in regenerative intestinal cells when epithelial integrity is lost, a phenotype of wound healing deployed in metastasis-initiating cells.


Assuntos
Neoplasias Colorretais , Molécula L1 de Adesão de Célula Nervosa , Animais , Neoplasias Colorretais/patologia , Humanos , Camundongos , Metástase Neoplásica , Molécula L1 de Adesão de Célula Nervosa/genética
19.
Nat Med ; 26(2): 259-269, 2020 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32042191

RESUMO

Developmental processes underlying normal tissue regeneration have been implicated in cancer, but the degree of their enactment during tumor progression and under the selective pressures of immune surveillance, remain unknown. Here we show that human primary lung adenocarcinomas are characterized by the emergence of regenerative cell types, typically seen in response to lung injury, and by striking infidelity among transcription factors specifying most alveolar and bronchial epithelial lineages. In contrast, metastases are enriched for key endoderm and lung-specifying transcription factors, SOX2 and SOX9, and recapitulate more primitive transcriptional programs spanning stem-like to regenerative pulmonary epithelial progenitor states. This developmental continuum mirrors the progressive stages of spontaneous outbreak from metastatic dormancy in a mouse model and exhibits SOX9-dependent resistance to natural killer cells. Loss of developmental stage-specific constraint in macrometastases triggered by natural killer cell depletion suggests a dynamic interplay between developmental plasticity and immune-mediated pruning during metastasis.


Assuntos
Adenocarcinoma/imunologia , Adenocarcinoma/patologia , Sistema Imunitário/fisiologia , Neoplasias Pulmonares/imunologia , Neoplasias Pulmonares/patologia , Metástase Neoplásica , Animais , Brônquios/metabolismo , Diferenciação Celular , Linhagem da Célula , Análise por Conglomerados , Bases de Dados Genéticas , Progressão da Doença , Endoderma/metabolismo , Feminino , Humanos , Hidrogéis/química , Células Matadoras Naturais/metabolismo , Pulmão/patologia , Camundongos , Fenótipo , Alvéolos Pulmonares/metabolismo , Regeneração , Transdução de Sinais
20.
Appl Opt ; 48(10): D130-6, 2009 Apr 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19340100

RESUMO

Applying localized external displacement to the breast surface can change the interstitial fluid pressure such that regional transient microvascular changes occur in oxygenation and vascular volume. Imaging these dynamic responses over time, while different pressures are applied, could provide selective temporal contrast for cancer relative to the surrounding normal breast. In order to investigate this possibility in normal breast tissue, a near-infrared spectral tomography system was developed that can simultaneously acquire data at three wavelengths with a 15 s time resolution per scan. The system was tested first with heterogeneous blood phantoms. Changes in regional blood concentrations were found to be linearly related to recovered mean hemoglobin concentration (Hb(T)) values (R(2)=0.9). In a series of volunteer breast imaging exams, data from 17 asymptomatic subjects were acquired under increasing and decreasing breast compression. Calculations show that a 10 mm displacement applied to the breast results in surface pressures in the range of 0-55 kPa depending on breast density. The recovered human data indicate that Hb(T) was reduced under compression and the normalized change was significantly correlated to the applied pressure with a p value of 0.005. The maximum Hb(T) decreases in breast tissue were associated with body mass index (BMI), which is a surrogate indicator of breast density. No statistically valid correlations were found between the applied pressure and the changes in tissue oxygen saturation (S(t)O(2)) or water percentage (H(2)O) across the range of BMI values studied.


Assuntos
Mama/irrigação sanguínea , Hemoglobinas/metabolismo , Pressão , Espectroscopia de Luz Próxima ao Infravermelho , Adulto , Feminino , Humanos , Cinética , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Concentração Osmolar , Imagens de Fantasmas , Fatores de Tempo
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