4.7 Article

Tumor-derived microparticles induce bone marrow-derived cell mobilization and tumor homing: A process regulated by osteopontin

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CANCER
Volume 135, Issue 2, Pages 270-281

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ijc.28678

Keywords

angiogenesis; bone marrow derived cells; microparticles; chemotherapy

Categories

Funding

  1. Israel Cancer Research Fund [3058/10]
  2. Israel Science Foundation [565/09]

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Acute chemotherapy can induce rapid bone-marrow derived pro-angiogenic cell (BMDC) mobilization and tumor homing, contributing to tumor regrowth. To study the contribution of tumor cells to tumor regrowth following therapy, we focused on tumor-derived microparticles (TMPs). EMT/6 murine-mammary carcinoma cells exposed to paclitaxel chemotherapy exhibited an increased number of TMPs and significantly altered their angiogenic properties. Similarly, breast cancer patients had increased levels of plasma MUC-1(+)TMPs following chemotherapy. In addition, TMPs from cells exposed to paclitaxel induced higher BMDC mobilization and colonization, but had no increased effect on angiogenesis in Matrigel plugs and tumors than TMPs from untreated cells. Since TMPs abundantly express osteopontin, a protein known to participate in BMDC trafficking, the impact of osteopontin-depleted TMPs on BMDC mobilization, colonization, and tumor angiogenesis was examined. Although EMT/6 tumors grown in mice inoculated with osteopontin-depleted TMPs had lower numbers of BMDC infiltration and microvessel density when compared with EMT/6 tumors grown in mice inoculated with wild-type TMPs, no significant difference in tumor growth was seen between the two groups. However, when BMDCs from paclitaxel-treated mice were injected into wild-type EMT/6-bearing mice, a substantial increase in tumor growth and BMDC infiltration was detected compared to osteopontin-depleted EMT/6-bearing mice injected with BMDCs from paclitaxel-treated mice. Collectively, our results suggest that osteopontin expressed by TMPs play an important role in BMDC mobilization and colonization of tumors, but is not sufficient to enhance the angiogenic activity in tumors. What's new? Cytotoxic drugs may actually increase angiogenesis, which could explain why tumor growth sometimes rebounds after chemotherapy. We know that proangiogenic bone-marrow-derived cells (BMDCs) are involved in this process, but how are they mobilized? In this study, the authors examined the role of tumor-derived microparticles (TMPs). They found that TMPs are altered following exposure of tumor cells to chemotherapy, which enables them to trigger proangiogenic BMDCs to rapidly mobilize and home to treated tumor sites. This effect is mediated in part by osteopontin.

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