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Targeting the perivascular niche sensitizes disseminated tumour cells to chemotherapy.

Authors :
Carlson, Patrick
Carlson, Patrick
Dasgupta, Arko
Grzelak, Candice A
Kim, Jeanna
Barrett, Alexander
Coleman, Ilsa M
Shor, Ryann E
Goddard, Erica T
Dai, Jinxiang
Schweitzer, Emma M
Lim, Andrea R
Crist, Sarah B
Cheresh, David A
Nelson, Peter S
Hansen, Kirk C
Ghajar, Cyrus M
Carlson, Patrick
Carlson, Patrick
Dasgupta, Arko
Grzelak, Candice A
Kim, Jeanna
Barrett, Alexander
Coleman, Ilsa M
Shor, Ryann E
Goddard, Erica T
Dai, Jinxiang
Schweitzer, Emma M
Lim, Andrea R
Crist, Sarah B
Cheresh, David A
Nelson, Peter S
Hansen, Kirk C
Ghajar, Cyrus M
Source :
Nature cell biology; vol 21, iss 2, 238-250; 1465-7392
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

The presence of disseminated tumour cells (DTCs) in bone marrow is predictive of poor metastasis-free survival of patients with breast cancer with localized disease. DTCs persist in distant tissues despite systemic administration of adjuvant chemotherapy. Many assume that this is because the majority of DTCs are quiescent. Here, we challenge this notion and provide evidence that the microenvironment of DTCs protects them from chemotherapy, independent of cell cycle status. We show that chemoresistant DTCs occupy the perivascular niche (PVN) of distant tissues, where they are protected from therapy by vascular endothelium. Inhibiting integrin-mediated interactions between DTCs and the PVN, driven partly by endothelial-derived von Willebrand factor and vascular cell adhesion molecule 1, sensitizes DTCs to chemotherapy. Importantly, chemosensitization is achieved without inducing DTC proliferation or exacerbating chemotherapy-associated toxicities, and ultimately results in prevention of bone metastasis. This suggests that prefacing adjuvant therapy with integrin inhibitors is a viable clinical strategy to eradicate DTCs and prevent metastasis.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Nature cell biology; vol 21, iss 2, 238-250; 1465-7392
Notes :
Nature cell biology vol 21, iss 2, 238-250 1465-7392
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1367451024
Document Type :
Electronic Resource