4.6 Article

Tenascin-C increases lung metastasis by impacting blood vessel invasions

Journal

MATRIX BIOLOGY
Volume 83, Issue -, Pages 26-47

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.matbio.2019.07.001

Keywords

Blood vessel invasions; Circulating tumor cells; Tumor emboli; Tenascin-C; Cellular plasticity; TGF-beta signaling; Lung metastasis; Endothelialization; Fsp1+cells; Endothelial cells

Funding

  1. Worldwide Cancer Research/AICR [14-1070]
  2. INCa (TENPLAMET)
  3. Ligue Regional contre le Cancer CCIR Grand Est
  4. INSERM
  5. University Strasbourg
  6. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81802655]
  7. Chinese Scholarship Council
  8. Mexican scholarship program CONACYT
  9. Arthritis Research UK

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Metastasis is a major cause of death in cancer patients. The extracellular matrix molecule tenascin-C is a known promoter of metastasis, however the underlying mechanisms are not well understood. To further analyze the impact of tenascin-C on cancer progression we generated MMTV-NeuNT mice that develop spontaneous mammary tumors, on a tenascin-C knockout background. We also developed a syngeneic orthotopic model in which tumor cells derived from a MMTV-NeuNT tumor. Tumor cells were transfected with control shRNA or with shRNA to knockdown tenascin-C expression and, were grafted into the mammary gland of immune competent, wildtype or tenascin-C knockout mice. We show that stromal-derived tenascin-C increases metastasis by reducing apoptosis and inducing the cellular plasticity of cancer cells located in pulmonary blood vessels invasions (BVI), before extravasation. We characterized BVI as organized structures of tightly packed aggregates of proliferating tumor cells with epithelial characteristics, surrounded by Fsp1+ cells, internally located platelets and, a lumina! monolayer of endothelial cells. We found extracellular matrix, in particular, tenascin-C, between the stromal cells and the tumor cell cluster. In mice lacking stromal-derived tenascin-C, the organization of pulmonary BVI was significantly affected, revealing novel functions of host derived tenascin-C in supporting the integrity of the endothelial cell coat, increasing platelet abundance, tumor cell survival, epithelial plasticity, thereby promoting overall lung metastasis. Many effects of tenascin-C observed in BVI including enhancement of cellular plasticity, survival and migration, could be explained by activation of TGF-beta signaling. Finally, in several human cancers, we also observed BVI to be surrounded by an endothelial monolayer and to express tenascin-C. Expression of tenascin-C is specific to BVI and is not observed in lymphatic vascular invasions frequent in breast cancer, which lack an endothelial lining. Given that BVI have prognostic significance for many tumor types, such as shorter cancer patient survival, increased metastasis, vessel occlusion, and organ failure, our data revealing a novel mechanism by which stromal tenascin-C promotes metastasis in human cancer, may have potential for diagnosis and therapy. (C) 2019 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V.

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