1. TGF-β Signaling Loop in Pancreatic Ductal Adenocarcinoma Activates Fibroblasts and Increases Tumor Cell Aggressiveness.
- Author
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di Miceli, Noemi, Baioni, Chiara, Barbieri, Linda, Danielli, Davide, Sala, Emiliano, Salvioni, Lucia, Garbujo, Stefania, Colombo, Miriam, Prosperi, Davide, Innocenti, Metello, and Fiandra, Luisa
- Subjects
ADENOCARCINOMA ,RESEARCH funding ,CANCER ,SMOOTH muscle ,EPITHELIAL-mesenchymal transition ,CELL physiology ,PANCREATIC duct ,MUSCLE cells ,CELLULAR signal transduction ,PANCREATIC tumors ,FIBROBLASTS ,DUCTAL carcinoma ,GEMCITABINE ,COMMUNICATION ,CYTOKINES ,TRANSFORMING growth factors-beta ,PHENOTYPES ,DISEASE progression - Abstract
Simple Summary: In pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC), the interaction between tumor cells and the tumor microenvironment is critical in regulating cancer progression. In particular, cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) affect the invasive activity and resistance to chemotherapy of tumor cells by means of contact-mediated and paracrine signals, the latter including transforming growth factor beta (TGF-β). By using advanced transwell and spheroid co-culture models as exploratory tools, we showed while that TGF-β is involved in the interplay between PDAC cells and fibroblasts and promotes the acquisition of aggressive phenotypes, additional as-yet-unknown factors play a role. We propose that these advanced cell culture models provide a pathologically relevant tractable system to investigate the role of the tumor microenvironment in PDAC progression and develop novel treatment strategies. Background: The interaction between cancer cells and cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) is a key determinant of the rapid progression, high invasiveness, and chemoresistance of aggressive desmoplastic cancers such as pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC). Tumor cells are known to reprogram fibroblasts into CAFs by secreting transforming growth factor beta (TGF-β), amongst other cytokines. In turn, CAFs produce soluble factors that promote tumor-cell invasiveness and chemoresistance, including TGF-β itself, which has a major role in myofibroblastic CAFs. Such a high level of complexity has hampered progress toward a clear view of the TGFβ signaling loop between stromal fibroblasts and PDAC cells. Methods: Here, we tackled this issue by using co-culture settings that allow paracrine signaling alone (transwell systems) or paracrine and contact-mediated signaling (3D spheroids). Results: We found that TGF-β is critically involved in the activation of normal human fibroblasts into alpha-smooth muscle actin (α-SMA)-positive CAFs. The TGF-β released by CAFs accounted for the enhanced proliferation and resistance to gemcitabine of PDAC cells. This was accompanied by a partial epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition in PDAC cells, with no increase in their migratory abilities. Nevertheless, 3D heterospheroids comprising PDAC cells and fibroblasts allowed monitoring the pro-invasive effects of CAFs on cancer cells, possibly due to combined paracrine and physical contact-mediated signals. Conclusions: We conclude that TGF-β is only one of the players that mediates the communication between PDAC cells and fibroblasts and controls the acquisition of aggressive phenotypes. Hence, these advanced in vitro models may be exploited to further investigate these events and to design innovative anti-PDAC therapies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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