4.7 Article

Stromal fibroblasts shape the myeloid phenotype in normal colon and colorectal cancer and induce CD163 and CCL2 expression in macrophages

Journal

CANCER LETTERS
Volume 520, Issue -, Pages 184-200

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.canlet.2021.07.006

Keywords

Cancer associated fibroblasts; Colon cancer; CCL2; Immune cell recruitment and polarization; Tumor microenvironment

Categories

Funding

  1. EU [SECRET-ITN 859962]
  2. Niederod-sterreichische Forschungs-und Bildungsges. m.bH. (NFB) [LSC18-017]
  3. Austrian Research Promotion Agency (FFG) [868039]
  4. Luxembourg National Research Fund [CORE/C16/BM/11282028, PoC/18/12554295]
  5. Fondation Marie-Jeanne and Edmond Schumacher
  6. Fondation Gustave and Simone Prevot

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Colorectal cancer is influenced by the tumor microenvironment, where cancer-associated fibroblasts and tumor-associated macrophages play crucial roles. The molecular crosstalk between tumor cells, fibroblasts, and macrophages affects monocyte recruitment and their differentiation into immunosuppressive macrophages. Cytokine profiling shows that fibroblasts induce specific cytokine secretion in co-culture with macrophages, contributing to tumor cell invasion.
Colorectal cancer (CRC) accounts for about 10% of cancer deaths worldwide. Colon carcinogenesis is critically influenced by the tumor microenvironment. Cancer associated fibroblasts (CAFs) and tumor associated macrophages (TAMs) represent the major components of the tumor microenvironment. TAMs promote tumor progression, angiogenesis and tissue remodeling. However, the impact of the molecular crosstalk of tumor cells (TCs) with CAFs and macrophages on monocyte recruitment and their phenotypic conversion is not known in detail so far. In a 3D human organotypic CRC model, we show that CAFs and normal colonic fibroblasts are critically involved in monocyte recruitment and for the establishment of a macrophage phenotype, characterized by high CD163 expression. This is in line with the steady recruitment and differentiation of monocytes to immunosuppressive macrophages in the normal colon. Cytokine profiling revealed that CAFs produce M-CSF, and IL6, IL8, HGF and CCL2 secretion was specifically induced by CAFs in co-cultures with macrophages. Moreover, macrophage/CAF/TCs co-cultures increased TC invasion. We demonstrate that CAFs and macrophages are the major producers of CCL2 and, upon co-culture, increase their CCL2 production twofold and 40-fold, respectively. CAFs and macrophages expressing high CCL2 were also found in vivo in CRC, strongly supporting our findings. CCL2, CCR2, CSF1R and CD163 expression in macrophages was dependent on active MCSFR signaling as shown by MCSFR inhibition. These results indicate that colon fibroblasts and not TCs are the major cellular component, recruiting and dictating the fate of infiltrated monocytes towards a specific macrophage population, characterized by high CD163 expression and CCL2 production.

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