4.6 Article

Hepcidin Upregulation in Colorectal Cancer Associates with Accumulation of Regulatory Macrophages and Epithelial-Mesenchymal Transition and Correlates with Progression of the Disease

Journal

CANCERS
Volume 14, Issue 21, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cancers14215294

Keywords

type 2 macrophages; cancer metastasis; prognosis; Stat3; cytokines

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Hepcidin is markedly induced in advanced stages of colorectal cancer and may serve as a prognostic biomarker in CRC.
Simple Summary Colorectal cancer (CRC) is one of the deadliest cancers worldwide, and this is mainly due to the fact that advanced, metastatic CRC is poorly responsive to current pharmacologic treatment. Therefore, studies aimed at dissecting the mechanisms driving CRC progression are worth pursuing in order to improve the treatment of the metastatic disease. We here analyzed whether hepcidin, a peptide hormone involved in the growth of cancer cells in many organs, identifies some subsets of CRC with advanced and aggressive course. By integrating results of in vitro/ex vivo studies with data of bioinformatics databases, we show that CRC cells express high levels of hepcidin and provide data supporting the role of hepcidin in promoting a tumor microenvironment that sustains CRC cell growth and metastasis. Overall, these novel findings could help develop therapeutic strategies to combat metastatic CRC. Advanced, metastatic colorectal cancer (CRC) is associated with high rate of mortality because of its poor responsiveness to chemotherapy/immunotherapy. Recent studies have shown that hepcidin, a peptide hormone produced mainly by hepatocytes, is expressed by and enhances the growth of tumor cells. We here assessed whether hepcidin expression helps identify subsets of CRC with advanced and aggressive course. By integrating results of in vitro/ex vivo studies with data of bioinformatics databases, we initially showed that hepcidin RNA and protein expression was more pronounced in tissue samples taken from the tumor area, as compared to the macroscopically unaffected, adjacent, colonic mucosa of CRC patients. The induction of hepcidin in the colonic epithelial cell line HCEC-1ct by interleukin (IL)-6, IL-21 and IL-23 occurred via a Stat3-dependent mechanism and, in primary CRC cells, hepcidin co-localized with active Stat3. In CRC tissue, hepcidin content correlated mainly with macrophage accumulation and IL-10 and CD206 expression, two markers of regulatory macrophages. Consistently, both IL-10 and CD206 were up-regulated by hepcidin in blood mononuclear cells. The highest levels of hepcidin were found in metastatic CRC and survival analysis showed that high expression of hepcidin associated with poor prognosis. Moreover, hepcidin expression correlated with markers of epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition and the silencing of hepcidin in CRC cells reduced epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition markers. These findings indicate that hepcidin is markedly induced in the advanced stages of CRC and suggest that it could serve as a prognostic biomarker in CRC.

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