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Dynamic altruistic cooperation within breast tumors

Authors :
Muhammad Sufyan Bin Masroni
Kee Wah Lee
Victor Kwan Min Lee
Siok Bian Ng
Chao Teng Law
Kok Siong Poon
Bernett Teck-Kwong Lee
Zhehao Liu
Yuen Peng Tan
Wee Ling Chng
Steven Tucker
Lynette Su-Mien Ngo
George Wai Cheong Yip
Min En Nga
Susan Swee Shan Hue
Thomas Choudary Putti
Boon Huat Bay
Qingsong Lin
Lihan Zhou
Mikael Hartman
Tze Ping Loh
Manikandan Lakshmanan
Sook Yee Lee
Vinay Tergaonkar
Huiwen Chua
Adeline Voon Hui Lee
Eric Yew Meng Yeo
Mo-Huang Li
Chan Fong Chang
Zizheng Kee
Karen Mei-Ling Tan
Soo Yong Tan
Evelyn Siew-Chuan Koay
Marco Archetti
Sai Mun Leong
Source :
Molecular Cancer, Vol 22, Iss 1, Pp 1-30 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
BMC, 2023.

Abstract

Abstract Background Social behaviors such as altruism, where one self-sacrifices for collective benefits, critically influence an organism’s survival and responses to the environment. Such behaviors are widely exemplified in nature but have been underexplored in cancer cells which are conventionally seen as selfish competitive players. This multidisciplinary study explores altruism and its mechanism in breast cancer cells and its contribution to chemoresistance. Methods MicroRNA profiling was performed on circulating tumor cells collected from the blood of treated breast cancer patients. Cancer cell lines ectopically expressing candidate miRNA were used in co-culture experiments and treated with docetaxel. Ecological parameters like relative survival and relative fitness were assessed using flow cytometry. Functional studies and characterization performed in vitro and in vivo include proliferation, iTRAQ-mass spectrometry, RNA sequencing, inhibition by small molecules and antibodies, siRNA knockdown, CRISPR/dCas9 inhibition and fluorescence imaging of promoter reporter-expressing cells. Mathematical modeling based on evolutionary game theory was performed to simulate spatial organization of cancer cells. Results Opposing cancer processes underlie altruism: an oncogenic process involving secretion of IGFBP2 and CCL28 by the altruists to induce survival benefits in neighboring cells under taxane exposure, and a self-sacrificial tumor suppressive process impeding proliferation of altruists via cell cycle arrest. Both processes are regulated concurrently in the altruists by miR-125b, via differential NF-κB signaling specifically through IKKβ. Altruistic cells persist in the tumor despite their self-sacrifice, as they can regenerate epigenetically from non-altruists via a KLF2/PCAF-mediated mechanism. The altruists maintain a sparse spatial organization by inhibiting surrounding cells from adopting the altruistic fate via a lateral inhibition mechanism involving a GAB1-PI3K-AKT-miR-125b signaling circuit. Conclusions Our data reveal molecular mechanisms underlying manifestation, persistence and spatial spread of cancer cell altruism. A minor population behave altruistically at a cost to itself producing a collective benefit for the tumor, suggesting tumors to be dynamic social systems governed by the same rules of cooperation in social organisms. Understanding cancer cell altruism may lead to more holistic models of tumor evolution and drug response, as well as therapeutic paradigms that account for social interactions. Cancer cells constitute tractable experimental models for fields beyond oncology, like evolutionary ecology and game theory.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14764598
Volume :
22
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Molecular Cancer
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.b9275cb0ff74a91bcbbbfb6118beefa
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12943-023-01896-7