4.6 Article

Tumor cells induce the cancer associated fibroblast phenotype via caveolin-1 degradation Implications for breast cancer and DCIS therapy with autophagy inhibitors

期刊

CELL CYCLE
卷 9, 期 12, 页码 2423-2433

出版社

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.4161/cc.9.12.12048

关键词

autophagy; cancer associated fibroblasts; caveolin-1; chloroquine; lysosomal degradation; myofibroblast; TGFbeta signaling; tumor stroma

资金

  1. W.W. Smith Charitable Trust
  2. Breast Cancer Alliance (BCA)
  3. American Cancer Society (ACS)
  4. NIH/NCI [R01-CA-080250, R01-CA-098779, R01-CA-120876, R01-AR-055660, R01-CA-70896, R01-CA-75503, R01-CA-86072, R01-CA-107382]
  5. Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation
  6. Breast Cancer Alliance, Inc.
  7. Susan G. Komen Career Catalyst
  8. Dr. Ralph and Marian C. Falk Medical Research Trust
  9. NIH/NCI Cancer Center Core [P30-CA-56036]
  10. Margaret Q. Landenberger Research Foundation
  11. Pennsylvania Department of Health
  12. Breakthrough Breast Cancer in the U.K.
  13. European Research Council

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Loss of stromal caveolin 1 (Cav-1) is a novel biomarker for cancer-associated fibroblasts that predicts poor clinical outcome in breast cancer and DCIS patients. We hypothesized that epithelial cancer cells may have the ability to drive Cav-1 downregulation in adjacent normal fibroblasts, thereby promoting the cancer associated fibroblast phenotype. to test this hypothesis directly, here we developed a novel co-culture model employing (i) human breast cancer cells (MCF7), and (ii) immortalized fibroblasts (hTERT-BJ1), which are grown under defined experimental conditions. Importantly, we show that co-culture of immortalized human fibroblasts with MCF7 breast cancer cells leads to Cav-1 downregulation in fibroblasts. these results were also validated using primary cultures of normal human mammary fibroblasts co-cultured with MCF7 cells. In this system, we show that Cav-1 downregulation is mediated by autophagic/lysosomal degradation, as pre-treatment with lysosome-specific inhibitors rescues Cav-1 expression. Functionally, we demonstrate that fibroblasts co-cultured with MCF7 breast cancer cells acquire a cancer associated fibroblast phenotype, characterized by Cav-1 downregulation, increased expression of myofibroblast markers and extracellular matrix proteins, and constitutive activation of TGF beta/Smad2 signaling. siRNA-mediated Cav-1 downregulation mimics several key changes that occur in co-cultured fibroblasts, clearly indicating that a loss of Cav-1 is a critical initiating factor, driving stromal fibroblast activation during tumorigenesis. As such, this co-culture system can now be used as an experimental model for generating synthetic cancer associated fibroblasts (CAFs). More specifically, these synthetic CAFs could be used for drug screening to identify novel therapeutics that selectively target the Cav-1-negative tumor micro-environment. our findings also suggest that chloroquine, or other autophagy/lysosome inhibitors, may be useful as anti-cancer agents, to therapeutically restore the expression of stromal Cav-1 in cancer associated fibroblasts. We discuss this possibility, in light of the launch of a new clinical trial that uses chloroquine to treat DCIS patients: PINC (preventing Invasive Breast Neoplasia with Cholorquine) [See http://clinicaltrials.gov/show/NCT01023477].//clinicaltrials.gov/show/NCT01023477

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