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Halting the vicious cycle within the multiple myeloma ecosystem: blocking JAM-A on bone marrow endothelial cells restores angiogenic homeostasis and suppresses tumor progression

Authors :
Antonio G. Solimando
Matteo C. Da Vià
Patrizia Leone
Paola Borrelli
Giorgio A. Croci
Paula Tabares
Andreas Brandl
Giuseppe Di Lernia
Francesco P. Bianchi
Silvio Tafuri
Torsten Steinbrunn
Alessandra Balduini
Assunta Melaccio
Simona De Summa
Antonella Argentiero
Hilka Rauert-Wunderlich
Maria A. Frassanito
Paolo Ditonno
Erik Henke
Wolfram Klapper
Roberto Ria
Carolina Terragna
Leo Rasche
Andreas Rosenwald
K. Martin Kortüm
Michele Cavo
Domenico Ribatti
Vito Racanelli
Hermann Einsele
Angelo Vacca
Andreas Beilhack
Source :
Haematologica, Vol 106, Iss 7 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Ferrata Storti Foundation, 2020.

Abstract

Interactions of malignant multiple myeloma (MM) plasma cells (MM-cells) with the microenvironment control MM-cell growth, survival, drug-resistance and dissemination. As in MM microvascular density increases in the bone marrow (BM), we investigated whether BM MM endothelial cells (MMECs) control disease progression via the junctional adhesion molecule A (JAM-A). Membrane and cytoplasmic JAM-A levels were upregulated in MMECs in 111 newly diagnosed (NDMM) and 201 relapsed-refractory (RRMM) patients compared to monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance (MGUS) and healthy controls. Elevated membrane expression of JAM-A on MMECs predicted poor clinical outcome. Mechanistically, addition of recombinant JAM-A to MMECs increased angiogenesis whereas its inhibition impaired angiogenesis and MM growth in 2D and 3D in vitro cell culture and chorioallantoic membrane-assays. To corroborate these findings, we treated MM bearing mice with JAM-A blocking mAb and demonstrated impaired MM progression corresponding to decreased MM-related vascularity. These findings support JAM-A as an important mediator of MM progression through facilitating MM-associated angiogenesis. Collectively, elevated JAM-A expression on bone marrow endothelial cells is an independent prognostic factor for patient survival in both NDMM and RRMM. Blocking JAM-A restricts angiogenesis in vitro, in embrio and in vivo and represents a suitable druggable molecule to halt neoangiogenesis and MM progression.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03906078 and 15928721
Volume :
106
Issue :
7
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Haematologica
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.2545760d0c3467b8997b010e53370db
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3324/haematol.2019.239913