4.8 Article

The perivascular niche regulates breast tumour dormancy

Journal

NATURE CELL BIOLOGY
Volume 15, Issue 7, Pages 807-+

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/ncb2767

Keywords

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Funding

  1. LBNL
  2. NCI [U54CA143836]
  3. Damon Runyon Cancer Research Foundation [DAG-109-10]
  4. NIH [R01HL042493, R01HL090895, HL54737]
  5. March of Dimes Foundation [6-FY12-356]
  6. Packard Foundation
  7. Carol Baldwin Breast Cancer Award
  8. NIH/NCRA [1 S10 RR023680-1]
  9. DOE from LBNL [DE-AC02-05CH1123]
  10. Hartwell Foundation
  11. US Department of Energy, Office of Biological and Environmental Research and Low Dose Scientific Focus Area [DE-AC02-05CH1123]
  12. National Cancer Institute (Bay Area Physical Sciences-Oncology Center, University of California, Berkeley, California) [U54CA143836, U01CA169538, U54CA126552, R37CA064786]
  13. Breast Cancer Research Foundation
  14. US Department of Defense [W81XWH0810736]

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In a significant fraction of breast cancer patients, distant metastases emerge after years or even decades of latency. How disseminated tumour cells (DTCs) are kept dormant, and what wakes them up, are fundamental problems in tumour biology. To address these questions, we used metastasis assays in mice and showed that dormant DTCs reside on microvasculature of lung, bone marrow and brain. We then engineered organotypic microvascular niches to determine whether endothelial cells directly influence breast cancer cell (BCC) growth. These models demonstrated that endothelial-derived thrombospondin-1 induces sustained BCC quiescence. This suppressive cue was lost in sprouting neovasculature; time-lapse analysis showed that sprouting vessels not only permit, but accelerate BCC outgrowth. We confirmed this surprising result in dormancy models and in zebrafish, and identified active TGF-beta 1 and periostin as tumour-promoting factors derived from endothelial tip cells. Our work reveals that stable microvasculature constitutes a dormant niche, whereas sprouting neovasculature sparks micrometastatic outgrowth.

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