4.8 Article

Tumour cell-derived exosomes endow mesenchymal stromal cells with tumour-promotion capabilities

期刊

ONCOGENE
卷 35, 期 46, 页码 6038-6042

出版社

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/onc.2016.131

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资金

  1. Scientific Innovation Project of the Chinese Academy of Science [XDA 01040107]
  2. Ministry of Science and Technology of China [2015CB964400]
  3. Programs of National Natural Science of China [81330046, 81273316, 81530043, 81571612]
  4. External Cooperation Program of BIC, Chinese Academy of Sciences [GJHZ201307]
  5. Shanghai Municipal Key Projects of Basic Research [12JC1409200]
  6. Shanghai Rising-Star Program [14QA1404200]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) are a major component of the tumour microenvironment. A plethora of elegant studies focusing on tumour-derived MSCs have shown that they, unlike normal MSCs in other tissue, exhibit a strong ability to promote tumour progression. However, the mechanisms underlying the conversion of normal MSCs into tumour-associated MSCs are unknown. We report here a critical role of tumour cell-derived exosomes in endowing bone marrow-derived MSCs (BM-MSCs) with a tumour-favourable phenotype. Tumour cell-derived exosomes affected neither the growth factor production nor the immunosuppressive property of MSCs; rather, they endowed MSCs with a strong ability to promote macrophage infiltration into B16-F0 melanoma or EL-4 lymphoma. Ablation of macrophages by clodronate liposome administration reversed the tumour-promoting effect of MSCs educated by tumour cell-derived exosomes (TE-MSCs) on the tumour growth. By comparing the chemokine profile of BM-MSCs with that of TE-MSCs, we found that TE-MSCs produced a large amount of CCR2 ligands, CCL2 and CCL7, which are responsible for macrophage recruitment. CCR2-specific inhibitor was found to block the tumour-promoting effect of TE-MSCs. Thus, our investigations demonstrated that tumour cell-derived exosomes confer BM-MSCs the ability to enhance tumour growth. Therefore, we uncovered a novel mechanism underlying the conversion of normal MSCs to tumour-associated MSCs.

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