4.8 Article

Mammary tumour cells remodel the bone marrow vascular microenvironment to support metastasis

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NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
卷 12, 期 1, 页码 -

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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-26556-6

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资金

  1. Australian National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) [1140187, 1165591, 461221, 1016701, 1024852, 1054618, 1080560]
  2. NHMRC IRIISS
  3. Victorian State Government through VCA
  4. Australian Cancer Research Foundation
  5. NHMRC Fellowships [490037, 637307, 1159488, 1102742]
  6. National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia [1080560, 1140187, 1159488, 1165591] Funding Source: NHMRC

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The study demonstrates the preferential homing of mouse mammary tumor cells to specific blood vessels within the bone marrow during the metastasis process, with the tumor cells remodeling the local vasculature by producing granulocyte-colony stimulating factor. This hijacking of the host microenvironment by tumor cells leads to the formation of a pro-tumorigenic niche in the bone marrow, highlighting the importance of targeting this metastatic niche to inhibit blood vessel remodeling and reduce bone metastasis burden.
The visualisation of the bone metastasis process in a spatial temporal manner is lacking. Here, the authors use three-dimensional quantitative imaging and show that mouse mammary tumour cells preferentially home to endothelial subtype type H vessels within the bone marrow and remodel this vasculature by producing granulocyte-colony stimulating factor. Bone marrow is a preferred metastatic site for multiple solid tumours and is associated with poor prognosis and significant morbidity. Accumulating evidence indicates that cancer cells colonise specialised niches within the bone marrow to support their long-term propagation, but the precise location and mechanisms that mediate niche interactions are unknown. Using breast cancer as a model of solid tumour metastasis to the bone marrow, we applied large-scale quantitative three-dimensional imaging to characterise temporal changes in the bone marrow microenvironment during disease progression. We show that mouse mammary tumour cells preferentially home to a pre-existing metaphyseal domain enriched for type H vessels. Metastatic lesion outgrowth rapidly remodelled the local vasculature through extensive sprouting to establish a tumour-supportive microenvironment. The evolution of this tumour microenvironment reflects direct remodelling of the vascular endothelium through tumour-derived granulocyte-colony stimulating factor (G-CSF) in a hematopoietic cell-independent manner. Therapeutic targeting of the metastatic niche by blocking G-CSF receptor inhibited pathological blood vessel remodelling and reduced bone metastasis burden. These findings elucidate a mechanism of 'host' microenvironment hijacking by mammary tumour cells to subvert the local microvasculature to form a specialised, pro-tumorigenic niche.

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