4.4 Article

Human-derived osteoblast-like cells and pericyte-like cells induce distinct metastatic phenotypes in primary breast cancer cells

Journal

EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE
Volume 246, Issue 8, Pages 971-985

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/1535370220971599

Keywords

Cancer; bone; metastatic cascade; tumor; organs on chips; pericytes

Funding

  1. National Cancer Institute of the National Institutes of Health [U01CA233363]

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Approximately 70% of advanced breast cancer patients will develop bone metastases, driven by interactions between breast cancer circulating tumor cells and local bone marrow cells. In vitro experiments show that pericyte-like cells promote invasion and migration of breast cancer cells, while osteoblast-like cells induce a dormant state, reflecting different phases of the bone metastatic process.
Approximately 70% of advanced breast cancer patients will develop bone metastases, which accounts for similar to 90% of cancer-related mortality. Breast cancer circulating tumor cells (CTCs) establish metastatic tumors in the bone after a close interaction with local bone marrow cells including pericytes and osteoblasts, both related to resident mesenchymal stem/stromal cells (BM-MSCs) progenitors. In vitro recapitulation of the critical cellular players of the bone microenvironment and infiltrating CTCs could provide new insights into their cross-talk during the metastatic cascade, helping in the development of novel therapeutic strategies. Human BM-MSCs were isolated and fractionated according to CD146 presence. CD146+ cells were utilized as pericyte-like cells (PLCs) given the high expression of the marker in perivascular cells, while CD146- cells were induced into an osteogenic phenotype generating osteoblast-like cells (OLCs). Transwell migration assays were performed to establish whether primary breast cancer cells (3384T) were attracted to OLC. Furthermore, proliferation of 3384T breast cancer cells was assessed in the presence of PLC- and OLC-derived conditioned media. Additionally, conditioned media cultures as well as transwell co-cultures of each OLCs and PLCs were performed with 3384T breast cancer cells for gene expression interrogation assessing their induced transcriptional changes with an emphasis on metastatic potential. PLC as well as their conditioned media increased motility and invasion potential of 3384T breast cancer cells, while OLC induced a dormant phenotype, downregulating invasiveness markers related with migration and proliferation. Altogether, these results indicate that PLC distinctively drive 3384T cancer cells to an invasive and migratory phenotype, while OLC induce a quiescence state, thus recapitulating the different phases of the in vivo bone metastatic process. These data show that phenotypic responses from metastasizing cancer cells are influenced by neighboring cells at the bone metastatic niche during the establishment of secondary metastatic tumors.

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