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1.
Along with degradation of type IV collagen in basement membrane, destruction of the stromal collagens, types I and III, is an essential step in the invasive/metastatic behavior of tumor cells, and it is mediated, at least in part, by interstitial collagenase 1 (matrix metalloproteinase 1 (MMP-1)). Because A2058 melanoma cells produce substantial quantities of MMP-1, we used these cells as models for studying invasion of type I collagen. With a sensitive and quantitative in vitro invasion assay, we monitored the ability of these cells to invade a matrix of type I collagen and the ability of a serine proteinase inhibitor and all-trans-retinoic acid to block invasion. Although these cells produce copious amounts of MMP-1, they do not invade collagen unless they are co-cultured with fibroblasts or with conditioned medium derived from fibroblasts. Our studies indicate that a proteolytic cascade that depends on stromal/tumor cell interactions facilitates the ability of A2058 melanoma cells to invade a matrix of type I collagen. This cascade activates latent MMP-1 and involves both serine proteinases and MMPs, particularly stromelysin 1 (MMP-3). All-trans-retinoic acid (10(-6) M) suppresses the invasion of tumor cells by several mechanisms that include suppression of MMP synthesis and an increase in levels of tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases 1 and 2. We conclude that invasion of stromal collagen by A2058 melanoma cells is mediated by a novel host/tumor cell interaction in which a proteolytic cascade culminates in the activation of pro-MMP-1 and tumor cell invasion.  相似文献   

2.
Local estradiol production within breast tissue is maintained by the aromatase cytochrome P450arom complex, which has been localized primarily to the stromal component of tumors but also has been detected in the breast epithelial cells. Paracrine interactions between stromal and epithelial components of the breast are critical to the sustained growth and progression of breast tumors. Maintenance of the differentiated state, including hormone and growth factor responsiveness, requires extracellular matrix proteins as substrata for cells. This research has focused on developing a cell culture system that more closely mimics in vivo interactions in order to dissect actual paracrine signaling between these two cell types. Human fibroblasts were isolated from breast tissue and were maintained in a cell culture system grown on plastic support or on a collagen I support matrix. The collagen I matrix model supports cell maintenance and subsequent differentiation on collagen rather than maximal proliferation, therefore allowing for a more accurate environment for the study of hormonal control and cellular communication. Initial experiments compared aromatase activity of patient fibroblasts grown on plastic versus collagen I using the tritiated water release method. Constitutive aromatase activity was found to be lower when cells were grown on a collagen gel for 4–7 days (7.7 fold lower) using DMEM/F12 containing 10% dextran coated charcoal stripped serum. However, fibroblasts grown on collagen I appeared to be significantly more responsive to stimulation by 100 nM dexamethasone (plastic: 6.0 fold induction, collagen: 33.2 fold induction) when pretreated for 12 h prior to measurement of aromatase activity. In an effort to examine paracrine interactions between the stromal and epithelial cells in breast tissue, experiments using conditioned media from fibroblast cultures were performed. Testosterone administration to fibroblasts results in the production of estradiol into the media in sufficient concentrations to elicit an increase in pS2 expression when the conditioned media is administered to MCF-7 cells. The addition of a potent aromatase inhibitor resulted in a complete suppression of fibroblast-derived estrogens and showed only a modest increase in pS2 expression. Culturing breast fibroblasts and epithelial cells on extracellular matrix allows for a more meaningful examination of the paracrine interactions between these cell types within the context of an appropriate extracellular environment. This study highlights the need for evaluation of gene expression in cell culture systems that accurately reflect the tissue microenvironment.  相似文献   

3.
Using a high performance liquid chromatography assay that detects the cleavage of the C-terminal leucine from angiotensin I, we have identified a carboxypeptidase activity in mast cells from human lung and in dispersed mast cell preparations from human skin. The enzyme activity was detected in a preparation of dispersed human mast cells from lung of greater than 99% purity and was released with histamine after stimulation with goat anti-human IgE. In nine preparations of dispersed human mast cells from lung of 10 to 99% purity, net percentage of release of carboxypeptidase correlated with the release of histamine, localizing carboxypeptidase to mast cell secretory granules. The enzyme activity was also detected in preparations of dispersed human mast cells from skin and in extracts of whole skin. The inhibitor profile and m.w. of carboxypeptidase activity from preparations of dispersed mast cells from skin was similar to that from dispersed mast cells from lung. Mast cell carboxypeptidase had a m.w. on gel filtration of 30,000 to 35,000. The enzyme in crude lysates of dispersed mast cell preparations had optimal activity between pH 8.5 and 9.5 and was inhibited by potato inhibitor, which distinguished it from carboxypeptidase in cultured human foreskin keratinocytes and adult fibroblasts, and from other proteolytic mast cell enzymes. The enzyme activity was also inhibited by EDTA, o-phenanthroline, and, to a small extent, by 8-OH quinoline, but not by Captopril, soybean trypsin inhibitor, or pepstatin. These findings demonstrate that human mast cell secretory granules contain carboxypeptidase in addition to tryptase and chymase. It appears that mast cells from skin may have a higher content of carboxypeptidase than do mast cells from lung.  相似文献   

4.
Proteolytic degradation of extracellular matrix (ECM) components during tissue remodeling plays a pivotal role in normal and pathological processes including wound healing, inflammation, tumor invasion, and metastasis. Proteolytic enzymes in tumors may activate or release growth factors from the ECM or act directly on the ECM itself, thereby facilitating angiogenesis or tumor cell migration. Fibroblast activation protein (FAP) is a cell surface antigen of reactive tumor stromal fibroblasts found in epithelial cancers and in granulation tissue during wound healing. It is absent from most normal adult human tissues. FAP is conserved throughout chordate evolution, with homologues in mouse and Xenopus laevis, whose expression correlates with tissue remodeling events. Using recombinant and purified natural FAP, we show that FAP has both dipeptidyl peptidase activity and a collagenolytic activity capable of degrading gelatin and type I collagen; by sequence, FAP belongs to the serine protease family rather than the matrix metalloprotease family. Mutation of the putative catalytic serine residue of FAP to alanine abolishes both enzymatic activities. Consistent with its in vivo expression pattern determined by immunohistochemistry, FAP enzyme activity was detected by an immunocapture assay in human cancerous tissues but not in matched normal tissues. This study demonstrates that FAP is present as an active cell surface-bound collagenase in epithelial tumor stroma and opens up investigation into physiological substrates of its novel, tumor-associated dipeptidyl peptidase activity.  相似文献   

5.
6.
The extracellular protease urokinase is known to be crucially involved in morphogenesis, tissue repair and tumor invasion by mediating matrix degradation and cell migration. Hepatocyte growth factor/scatter factor (HGF/SF) is a secretory product of stromal fibroblasts, sharing structural motifs with enzymes of the blood clotting cascade, including a zymogen cleavage site. HGF/SF promotes motility, invasion and growth of epithelial and endothelial cells. Here we show that HGF/SF is secreted as a single-chain biologically inactive precursor (pro-HGF/SF), mostly found in a matrix-associated form. Maturation of the precursor into the active alpha beta heterodimer takes place in the extracellular environment and results from a serum-dependent proteolytic cleavage. In vitro, pro-HGF/SF was cleaved at a single site by nanomolar concentrations of pure urokinase, generating the active mature HGF/SF heterodimer. This cleavage was prevented by specific urokinase inhibitors, such as plasminogen activator inhibitor type-1 and protease nexin-1, and by antibodies directed against the urokinase catalytic domain. Addition of these inhibitors to HGF/SF responsive cells prevented activation of the HGF/SF precursor. These data show that urokinase acts as a pro-HGF/SF convertase, and suggest that some of the growth and invasive cellular responses mediated by this enzyme may involve activation of HGF/SF.  相似文献   

7.
Rat pancreatic beta cells differ in their individual sensitivity to glucose-inducible metabolic changes. The present study examines whether beta cells with a higher metabolic threshold require higher glucose levels for stimulation of their secretory activity. Purified beta cells were distributed according to their metabolic redox state at 7.5 mM glucose; the metabolically responsive (high responsive) and unresponsive (low responsive) subpopulations of comparable size and viability were reaggregated in the presence of [3H]tyrosine and then perfused at 2.8 mM glucose with 10-min pulses of increasing glucose concentration. Glucose elicited first-phase insulin release in both high and low responsive subpopulations from, respectively, 4.2 and 8.3 mM on. The amplitude of both secretory responses increased dose dependently, the rates in the high responsive subpopulation being 2-fold higher than in the low responsive one. At all stimulating glucose levels, fractional release of 3H-labeled insulin was 3- to 4-fold higher than that of immunoreactive insulin. Preferential release of newly formed insulin was already maximally stimulated at 4.2 mM glucose in the high responsive subpopulation, whereas it increased dose-dependently in the low responsive one. These results indicate the existence of intercellular differences in the secretory activity of glucose-exposed beta cells, both in terms of glucose sensitivity and of amplitude. This heterogeneity in beta cell secretory responsiveness parallels that which has been previously described for the cellular metabolic and biosynthetic functions. It is concluded that glucose dose-dependently recruits beta cells into both biosynthetic and secretory activities. Co-existence of inactive and activated cells can explain preferential release of newly synthesized over preformed hormone during glucose stimulation.  相似文献   

8.
Matrix metalloproteinases in tumor-host cell communication   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
The microenvironment or stroma immediately surrounding tumor cells consists of a three-dimensional extracellular matrix (ECM) and stromal cells such as fibroblasts and inflammatory cells. The matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) constitute a family of over 24 members, which collectively are capable of degrading virtually the entire ECM. Strict regulation of MMP expression is critical in order to maintain proper ECM homeostasis, but in disease states such as cancer there is often a high level of MMP activity at the tumor-stroma interface. Several studies have documented the importance of MMP-mediated ECM destruction in the successful dissemination of several tumor types, but it has become increasingly clear that they are also involved in earlier stages of tumorigenesis. MMPs are implicated in a wide variety of roles that can assist tumor initiation, growth, migration, angiogenesis, the selection of apoptosis-resistant subpopulations, and in invasion and metastasis. Interestingly, the factors responsible for many of these effects are derived from the cell surfaces of the tumor or stromal cells or are embedded in the ECM. Therefore, the MMPs can no longer be thought of solely as ECM destructionists, but as part of an elegant communication system through which the tumor interacts with the stroma.  相似文献   

9.
The roles of tumor stroma in carcinogenesis are still unclear. This study was aimed at designing an in vitro model for investigating the effects of stromal fibroblasts in the invasive growth of squamous cell carcinoma. Using two cancer cell lines, we performed three-dimensional co-culture with dermal equivalents to evaluate the effects of fibroblasts in cancer invasion. In vitro models for cellular interaction study were designed as follows: a collagen gel-based direct co-culture model (C-Dr) and a collagen gel-based indirect co-culture model (C-In). The invasive growth was found only in the dermal equivalents with fibroblasts. MMP-2 activity could be induced by direct contact between cancer cells and stromal fibroblasts. Cathepsin D was also highly expressed when co-cultured with cancer cells and fibroblasts. The present study demonstrated that the presence of fibroblasts is essential in cancer invasion and that collagen gel-based co-culture models might be useful for invasive study.  相似文献   

10.
Metastatic processes, including cell invasion, extracellular matrix degradation, and tissue remodeling, require cellular reorganization and proliferation. The cell signaling molecules required and the proteins involved in cell restructuring have not been completely elucidated. We have been studying the role of sphingolipids in normal cell activity and in several pathophysiological states. In this study we used immunohistochemistry to observe the presence of the two known subunits of serine palmitoyltransferase (SPT) in proliferating cells, in an in vitro model of wound repair, and in human malignant tissue. We report increased expression of the two subunits, SPT1 and SPT2, in the proliferating cells in these models. We also demonstrate a change in subcellular localization of the SPT subunits from predominantly cytosolic in quiescent cells to nuclear in proliferating cells. In addition, we observed SPT1 and SPT2 immunoreactivity in reactive stromal fibroblasts surrounding the carcinoma cells of some of the tumors. This enhanced SPT expression was absent in the stromal fibroblasts surrounding normal epithelial cells. Our results suggest a potential role for overexpression of SPT in the processes of cell metastasis.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Rho GTPases participate in various cellular processes, including normal and tumor cell migration. It has been reported that RhoA is targeted for degradation at the leading edge of migrating cells by the E3 ubiquitin ligase Smurf1, and that this is required for the formation of protrusions. We report that Smurf1-dependent RhoA degradation in tumor cells results in the down-regulation of Rho kinase (ROCK) activity and myosin light chain 2 (MLC2) phosphorylation at the cell periphery. The localized inhibition of contractile forces is necessary for the formation of lamellipodia and for tumor cell motility in 2D tissue culture assays. In 3D invasion assays, and in in vivo tumor cell migration, the inhibition of Smurf1 induces a mesenchymal-amoeboid-like transition that is associated with a more invasive phenotype. Our results suggest that Smurf1 is a pivotal regulator of tumor cell movement through its regulation of RhoA signaling.  相似文献   

13.
Transmembrane metalloproteinases of the disintegrin and metalloproteinase (ADAM) family control cell signaling interactions via hydrolysis of protein extracellular domains. Prior work has shown that the receptor tyrosine kinase, c-Kit (CD117), is essential for mast cell survival and that serum levels of c-Kit increase in proliferative mast cell disorders, suggesting the existence of c-Kit shedding pathways in mast cells. In the present work, we report that tumor necrosis factor alpha-converting enzyme (TACE; ADAM-17) mediates shedding of c-Kit. Stimulation of transfected cells with phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) induced metalloproteinase-mediated release of c-Kit ectodomain, which increased further upon TACE overexpression. By contrast, TACE-deficient fibroblasts did not demonstrate inducible release, thus identifying TACE as the metalloproteinase primarily responsible for PMA-induced c-Kit shedding. Surface expression of c-Kit by the human mast cell-1 line decreased upon phorbol-induced shedding, which involved metalloproteinase activity susceptible to inhibition by tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase (TIMP)-3. To further explore the role of TACE in shedding of c-Kit from mast cells, we compared the behavior of mast cells derived from murine embryonic stem cells. In these studies, PMA decreased surface c-Kit levels on mast cells expressing wild-type (+/+) TACE but not on those expressing an inactive mutant (DeltaZn/DeltaZn), confirming the role of TACE in PMA-induced c-Kit shedding. Compared with TACE(+/+) cells, TACE(DeltaZn/DeltaZn) mast cells also demonstrated decreased constitutive shedding and increased basal surface expression of c-Kit, with diminished apoptosis in response to c-Kit ligand deprivation. These data suggest that TACE controls mast cell survival by regulating shedding and surface expression of c-Kit.  相似文献   

14.
Tumor progression is controlled by signals from cellular and extra-cellular microenvironment including stromal cells and the extracellular matrix. Consequently, three-dimensional in vitro tumor models are essential to study the interaction of tumor cells with their microenvironment appropriately in a biologically relevant manner. We have previously used organotypic co-cultures to analyze the malignant growth of human squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) cell lines on a stromal equivalent in vitro. In this model, SCC cell lines are grown on a collagen-I gel containing fibroblasts. Since macrophages play a critical role in the progression of many tumor types, we now have expanded this model by integrating macrophages into the collagen gel of these organotypic tumor co-cultures. This model was established as a murine and a human system of skin SCCs. The effect of macrophages on tumor progression depends on their polarization. We demonstrate that macrophage polarization in organotypic co-cultures can be modulated towards and M1 or an M2 phenotype by adding recombinant IFN-γ and LPS or IL-4 respectively to the growth medium. IL-4 stimulation of macrophage-containing cultures resulted in enhanced tumor cell invasion evidenced by degradation of the basement membrane, enhanced collagenolytic activity and increased MMP-2 and MMP-9. Interestingly, extended co-culture with tumor cells for three weeks resulted in spontaneous M2 polarization of macrophages without IL-4 treatment. Thus, we demonstrate that macrophages can be successfully integrated into organotypic co-cultures of murine or human skin SCCs and that this model can be exploited to analyze macrophage activation towards a tumor supporting phenotype.  相似文献   

15.
Cancer progression (initiation, growth, invasion and metastasis) occurs through interactions between malignant cells and the surrounding tumor stromal cells. The tumor microenvironment is comprised of a variety of cell types, such as fibroblasts, immune cells, vascular endothelial cells, pericytes and bone-marrow-derived cells, embedded in the extracellular matrix (ECM). Cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) have a pro-tumorigenic role through the secretion of soluble factors, angiogenesis and ECM remodeling. The experimental models for cancer cell survival, proliferation, migration, and invasion have mostly relied on two-dimensional monocellular and monolayer tissue cultures or Boyden chamber assays. However, these experiments do not precisely reflect the physiological or pathological conditions in a diseased organ. To gain a better understanding of tumor stromal or tumor matrix interactions, multicellular and three-dimensional cultures provide more powerful tools for investigating intercellular communication and ECM-dependent modulation of cancer cell behavior. As a platform for this type of study, we present an experimental model in which cancer cells are cultured on collagen gels embedded with primary cultures of CAFs.  相似文献   

16.
There is growing interest in studying pathways of mast cell activation. In a mouse model of chronic graft-vs-host disease (cGVHD) extensive mast cell activation and degranulation occurs in vivo coincident with the development of dermal fibrosis. An interesting feature of this model is that the mast cell reaction is slow to develop, occurring over a period of weeks and waning by 300 days. The aim of our work was to investigate the effects of supernatants from splenocytes of such cGVHD mice (cGVHD sups) on mouse and rat peritoneal mast cells cocultured with 3T3 skin fibroblasts. We found that cGVHD sups are able to release histamine from both mouse and rat cultured mast cells in a slow fashion. Histamine release became evident only after 5-8 days of coculture of the mast cells with the cGVHD supernatants and thereafter decreased to basal levels. Mast cell activation due to cGVHD supernatants was a noncytotoxic event as demonstrated by mast cell counts in the cocultures and by the ability of mast cells to exclude trypan blue. Mast cells that had been activated by incubation with the cGVHD sups were as responsive to stimulation with either anti-IgE antibodies or compound 48/80 as were mast cells incubated with control sups. Supernatants from mice early in GVHD (Days 11-28) were most active in promoting histamine release. Supernatants from spleens of mice which had GVHD for 290 days and where the mast cells had returned to full granulation in vivo were inactive. This is the first in vitro study demonstrating slow mast cell histamine release instituted by other cells, namely the splenocytes of cGVHD mice.  相似文献   

17.
KIT receptor is required for mast cell development, survival, and migration toward its ligand stem cell factor (SCF). Many solid tumors express SCF and this leads to mast cell recruitment to tumors and release of mediators linked to tumor angiogenesis, growth, and metastasis. Here, we investigate whether FES protein-tyrosine kinase, a downstream effector of KIT signaling in mast cells, is required for migration of mast cells toward SCF-expressing mammary tumors. Using a novel agarose drop assay for chemotaxis of bone marrow-derived mast cells (BMMC) toward SCF, we found that defects in chemotaxis of fes-null BMMCs correlated with disorganized microtubule networks in polarized cells. FES displayed partial colocalization with microtubules in polarized BMMCs and has at least two direct microtubule binding sites within its N-terminal F-BAR and SH2 domains. An oligomerization-disrupting mutation within the Fer/CIP4 homology-Bin/Amphiphysin/Rvs (F-BAR) domain had no effect on microtubule binding, whereas microtubule binding to the SH2 domain was dependent on the phosphotyrosine-binding pocket. FES involvement in mast cell recruitment to tumors was tested using the AC2M2 mouse mammary carcinoma model. These tumor cells expressed SCF and promoted BMMC recruitment in a KIT- and FES-dependent manner. Engraftment of AC2M2 orthotopic and subcutaneous tumors in control or fes-null mice, revealed a key role for FES in recruitment of mast cells to the tumor periphery. This may contribute to the reduced tumor growth and metastases observed in fes-null mice compared with control mice. Taken together, FES is a potential therapeutic target to limit the progression of tumors with stromal mast cell involvement.  相似文献   

18.
NIH-3T3 fibroblasts expressing epidermal growth factor receptors (EGFRs) lacking the actin binding domain (ABD) were analyzed for their EGF-induced capacity to invade a bone marrow stromal cell (BMSC) monolayer. The fibroblasts display a reduction in the percentage of cytoskeleton-associated EGFRs. Furthermore, EGF-induced tyrosine kinase activity is unaffected by the mutation. Cells expressing the mutant EGFRs hardly invade a BMSC monolayer upon EGF stimulation in contrast to cells expressing wild-type EGFRs. Using the same cells no difference was observed in PDGF-induced invasion, which ligand was as potent in both cell types as EGF was in wild-type cells. Inhibition of both the phosphatidyl inositol-3-kinase (PI-3-K) and lipoxygenase pathways in wild-type cells mimicked the effect of the ABD deletion. Our results point to an important role for the ABD of the EGFR in EGF-induced tissue invasion.  相似文献   

19.
There is growing evidence that stromal fibroblasts can promote tumor progression via several mechanisms. We previously reported that podoplanin (PDPN) expressed on stromal fibroblasts is functionally protein responsible for the promotion of tumor formation in mouse subcutaneous tissue. The purpose of the present study was to reveal the molecular mechanism by which PDPN on stromal fibroblasts promotes tumor formation. The subcutaneous co-injection of the human lung adenocarcinoma cell line A549 and human fibroblasts (hFbs) overexpressing wild-type podoplanin (WT-PDPN) promoted subcutaneous tumor formation, compared with the co-injection of A549 and control hFbs (64% vs 21%). On the other hand, hFbs expressing PDPN mutant in which the cytoplasmic domain of PDPN was deleted (PDPN-Del.IC), resulted in a relatively lower level of tumor formation (33%). Since PDPN reportedly regulates RhoA activity through its cytoplasmic domain, we measured the activation state of RhoA in hFbs expressing WT-PDPN. RhoA activity was 2.7-fold higher in WT-PDPN expressing hFbs than in control hFbs. Furthermore, the subcutaneous co-injection of hFbs expressing constitutive active RhoA (G14VRhoA) and A549 cells enhanced tumor formation compared with the co-injection of the same cell line and control hFbs. These results indicate that enhanced RhoA activity in hFbs expressing PDPN may be one of the mechanisms resulting in the promotion of tumor formation, suggesting that biomechanical remodeling of the microenvironment by stromal fibroblasts may play important roles in tumor progression.  相似文献   

20.
The signaling events triggered by soluble mediators released from both transformed and stromal cells shape the phenotype of tumoral cells and have significant implications in cancer development and progression. In this study we performed an in vitro heterotypic signaling assays by evaluating the proteome diversity of human dermal fibroblasts after stimulation with the conditioned media obtained from malignant melanoma cells. In addition, we also evaluated the changes in the proteome of melanoma cells after stimulation with their own conditioned media as well as with the conditioned medium from melanoma-stimulated fibroblasts. Our results revealed a clear rearrangement in the proteome of stromal and malignant cells upon crosstalk of soluble mediators. The main proteome signature of fibroblasts stimulated with melanoma conditioned medium was related to protein synthesis, which indicates that this process might be an early response of stromal cells. In addition, the conditioned medium derived from ‘primed’ stromal cells (melanoma-stimulated fibroblasts) was more effective in altering the functional phenotype (cell migration) of malignant cells than the conditioned medium from non-stimulated fibroblasts. Collectively, self- and cross-stimulation may play a key role in shaping the tumor microenvironment and enable tumoral cells to succeed in the process of melanoma progression and metastasis. Although the proteome landscape of cells participating in such a heterotypic signaling represents a snapshot of a highly dynamic state, understanding the diversity of proteins and enriched biological pathways resulting from stimulated cell states may allow for targeting specific cell regulatory motifs involved in melanoma progression and metastasis.  相似文献   

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