4.2 Article

Short-Term Environmental Conditioning Enhances Tumorigenic Potential of Triple-Negative Breast Cancer Cells

Journal

TOMOGRAPHY
Volume 5, Issue 4, Pages 346-357

Publisher

GRAPHO PUBLICATIONS
DOI: 10.18383/j.tom.2019.00019

Keywords

Fluorescence; bioluminescence; signaling; breast cancer

Funding

  1. United States National Institutes of Health [R01CA238042, R01CA196018, U01CA210152, R01CA238023, R33CA225549, R50CA221807, R37CA222563]
  2. American Cancer Society-Michigan Cancer Research Fund Postdoctoral Fellowship [PF-18 -236-01-CCG]
  3. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship [DGE 1256260]

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Tumor microenvironments expose cancer cells to heterogeneous, dynamic environments by shifting availability of nutrients, growth factors, and metabolites. Cells integrate various inputs to generate cellular memory that determines trajectories of subsequent phenotypes. Here we report that short-term exposure of triple-negative breast cancer cells to growth factors or targeted inhibitors regulates subsequent tumor initiation. Using breast cancer cells with different driver mutations, we conditioned cells lines with various stimuli for 4 hours before implanting these cells as tumor xenografts and quantifying tumor progression by means of bioluminescence imaging. In the orthotopic model, conditioning a low number of cancer cells with fetal bovine serum led to enhancement of tumor-initiating potential, tumor volume, and liver metastases. Epidermal growth factor and the mTORC1 inhibitor ridaforolimus produced similar but relatively reduced effects on tumorigenic potential. These data show that a short-term stimulus increases tumorigenic phenotypes based on cellular memory. Conditioning regimens failed to alter proliferation or adhesion of cancer cells in vitro or kinase signaling through Akt and ERK measured by multiphoton microscopy in vivo, suggesting that other mechanisms enhanced tumorigenesis. Given the dynamic nature of the tumor environment and time-varying concentrations of small-molecule drugs, this work highlights how variable conditions in tumor environments shape tumor formation, metastasis, and response to therapy.

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