4.7 Article

The melanoma brain metastatic microenvironment: aldolase C partakes in shaping the malignant phenotype of melanoma cells - a case of inter-tumor heterogeneity

Journal

MOLECULAR ONCOLOGY
Volume 15, Issue 5, Pages 1376-1390

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/1878-0261.12872

Keywords

aldolase C; brain metastasis; melanoma; microglia; tumor microenvironment

Categories

Funding

  1. Dr. Miriam and Sheldon G. Adelson Medical Research Foundation (Needham, MA, USA)

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The study examined the functional role of ALDOC in melanoma brain metastasis, revealing differential impacts on malignant phenotype across different variants. Results emphasized the complex interactions between microglia cells and MBM, as well as the challenge of tumor heterogeneity in treatment planning.
Previous studies indicated that microglia cells upregulate the expression of aldolase C (ALDOC) in melanoma cells. The present study using brain-metastasizing variants from three human melanomas explores the functional role of ALDOC in the formation and maintenance of melanoma brain metastasis (MBM). ALDOC overexpression impacted differentially the malignant phenotype of these three variants. In the first variant, ALDOC overexpression promoted cell viability, adhesion to and transmigration through a layer of brain endothelial cells, and amplified brain micrometastasis formation. The cross-talk between this MBM variant and microglia cells promoted the proliferation and migration of the latter cells. In sharp contrast, ALDOC overexpression in the second brain-metastasizing melanoma variant reduced or did not affect the same malignancy features. In the third melanoma variant, ALDOC overexpression augmented certain characteristics of malignancy and reduced others. The analysis of biological functions and disease pathways in the ALDOC overexpressing variants clearly indicated that ALDOC induced the expression of tumor progression promoting genes in the first variant and antitumor progression properties in the second variant. Overall, these results accentuate the complex microenvironment interactions between microglia cells and MBM, and the functional impact of intertumor heterogeneity. Since intertumor heterogeneity imposes a challenge in the planning of cancer treatment, we propose to employ the functional response of tumors with an identical histology, to a particular drug or the molecular signature of this response, as a predictive indicator of response/nonresponse to this drug.

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