4.7 Article

Soluble factors regulated by epithelial-mesenchymal transition mediate tumour angiogenesis and myeloid cell recruitment

Journal

JOURNAL OF PATHOLOGY
Volume 236, Issue 4, Pages 491-504

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/path.4546

Keywords

epithelial-mesenchymal transition; cancer; angiogenesis; myeloid cells

Funding

  1. Fonds de la Recherche Scientifique Medicale
  2. Fonds de la Recherche Scientifique (FRS-FNRS, Belgium)
  3. Foundation against Cancer (foundation of public interest, Belgium)
  4. Partenariat Hubert Curien-Tournesol
  5. Fonds speciaux de la Recherche (University of Liege)
  6. Centre Anticancereux pres l'Universite de Liege
  7. Fonds Leon Fredericq (University of Liege)
  8. Direction Generale Operationnelle de l'Economie, de l'Emploi et de la Recherche from the SPW (Region Wallonne, Belgium)

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Epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) programmes provide cancer cells with invasive and survival capacities that might favour metastatic dissemination. Whilst signalling cascades triggering EMT have been extensively studied, the impact of EMT on the crosstalk between tumour cells and the tumour microenvironment remains elusive. We aimed to identify EMT-regulated soluble factors that facilitate the recruitment of host cells in the tumour. Our findings indicate that EMT phenotypes relate to the induction of a panel of secreted mediators, namely IL-8, IL-6, sICAM-1, PAI-1 and GM-CSF, and implicate the EMT-transcription factor Snail as a regulator of this process. We further show that EMT-derived soluble factors are pro-angiogenic in vivo (in the mouse ear sponge assay), ex vivo (in the rat aortic ring assay) and in vitro (in a chemotaxis assay). Additionally, conditioned medium from EMT-positive cells stimulates the recruitment of myeloid cells. In a bank of 40 triple-negative breast cancers, tumours presenting features of EMT were significantly more angiogenic and infiltrated by a higher quantity of myeloid cells compared to tumours with little or no EMT. Taken together, our results show that EMT programmes trigger the expression of soluble mediators in cancer cells that stimulate angiogenesis and recruit myeloid cells in vivo, which might in turn favour cancer spread. Copyright (c) 2015 Pathological Society of Great Britain and Ireland. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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