4.8 Article

Tumor Self-Seeding by Circulating Cancer Cells

Journal

CELL
Volume 139, Issue 7, Pages 1315-1326

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2009.11.025

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [CA94060]
  2. Hearst Foundation
  3. Alan and Sandra Gerry Metastasis Research Initiative
  4. Department of Defense Era of Hope postdoctoral fellowship

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Cancer cells that leave the primary tumor can seed metastases in distant organs, and it is thought that this is a unidirectional process. Here we show that circulating tumor cells (CTCs) can also colonize their tumors of origin, in a process that we call tumor self-seeding. Self-seeding of breast cancer, colon cancer, and melanoma tumors in mice is preferentially mediated by aggressive CTCs, including those with bone, lung, or brain-metastatic tropism. We find that the tumor-derived cytokines IL-6 and IL-8 act as CTC attractants whereas MMP1/collagenase-1 and the actin cytoskeleton component fascin-1 are mediators of CTC infiltration into mammary tumors. We show that self-seeding can accelerate tumor growth, angiogenesis, and stromal recruitment through seed-derived factors including the chemokine CXCL1. Tumor self-seeding could explain the relationships between anaplasia, tumor size, vascularity and prognosis, and local recurrence seeded by disseminated cells following ostensibly complete tumor excision.

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