4.3 Article

Osteotropism of neuroendocrine tumors: role of the CXCL12/CXCR4 pathway in promoting EMT in vitro

Journal

ONCOTARGET
Volume 8, Issue 14, Pages 22534-22549

Publisher

IMPACT JOURNALS LLC
DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.15122

Keywords

carcinoid; bone metastasis; SDF-1; epithelial-mesenchymal transition; GPCR nuclear translocation

Funding

  1. Italian Association for Cancer Research (AIRC) [IG17536]
  2. Umberto Veronesi Foundation (Post-Doctoral Fellowship)
  3. Apulia Region (Oncogenomic Project)

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Neuroendocrine tumors (NETs) metastasize to the skeleton in approximately 20% of patients. We have previously shown that the epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) regulates the NET osteotropism and that CXCR4 overexpression predicts bone spreading. Here, we unravel the molecular mechanisms linking the activation of the CXCL12/CXCR4 axis to the bone colonization of NETs using cell lines representative of pancreatic (BON1, CM, QGP1), intestinal (CNDT 2.5), and bronchial origin (H727). By combining flow cytometry and ELISA, BON1, CM and QGP1 cells were defined as CXCR4(high)/CXCL12(low), while H727 and CNDT 2.5 were CXCR4(low)/CXCL12(high). CXCL12 was inert on cell proliferation, but significantly increased the in vitro osteotropism of CXCR4(high)/CXCL12(low) cells, as assessed by transwell assays with or without Matrigel membranes. In these cells, CXCL12 induced in vitro a marked EMT-like transcriptional shift with acquirement of a mesenchymal shape. The nuclei of CXCR4(high)/CXCL12(low) NET cells were typically enriched in non-phosphorylated CXCR4, particularly upon agonist stimulation. Silencing of CXCR4 via siRNA prevented the CXCL12-induced EMT in CXCR4(high)/CXCL12(low) NET cell lines resulting in the abrogation of both migration and transcriptional mesenchymal patterns. Our data suggest that CXCL12 conveys EMT-promoting signals in NET cells through CXCR4, which in turn regulates transcriptional, morphologic and functional modifications resulting in enhanced in vitro osteotropism of NET cells. Unique functions of CXCR4 may be segregated in relation to its subcellular localization and may acquire potential relevance in future in vivo studies.

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