학술논문

Resolving cancer-stroma interfacial signalling and interventions with micropatterned tumour-stromal assays.
Document Type
article
Source
Nature communications. 5(1)
Subject
Microcirculation
Bone Marrow Cells
Cell Line
Tumor
Fibroblasts
Stromal Cells
Animals
Mice
Inbred NOD
Humans
Mice
Mice
SCID
Bone Neoplasms
Breast Neoplasms
Mammary Neoplasms
Experimental
Neoplasm Metastasis
Disease Progression
Morpholines
Purines
Collagen
Green Fluorescent Proteins
Ki-67 Antigen
Gene Expression Profiling
Neoplasm Transplantation
Signal Transduction
Gene Expression Regulation
Neoplastic
Phenotype
Female
Cell Line
Tumor
Inbred NOD
SCID
Mammary Neoplasms
Experimental
Gene Expression Regulation
Neoplastic
Cancer
Breast Cancer
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Language
Abstract
Tumour-stromal interactions are a determining factor in cancer progression. In vivo, the interaction interface is associated with spatially resolved distributions of cancer and stromal phenotypes. Here, we establish a micropatterned tumour-stromal assay (μTSA) with laser capture microdissection to control the location of co-cultured cells and analyse bulk and interfacial tumour-stromal signalling in driving cancer progression. μTSA reveals a spatial distribution of phenotypes in concordance with human oestrogen receptor-positive (ER+) breast cancer samples, and heterogeneous drug activity relative to the tumour-stroma interface. Specifically, an unknown mechanism of reversine is shown in targeting tumour-stromal interfacial interactions using ER+ MCF-7 breast cancer and bone marrow-derived stromal cells. Reversine suppresses MCF-7 tumour growth and bone metastasis in vivo by reducing tumour stromalization including collagen deposition and recruitment of activated stromal cells. This study advocates μTSA as a platform for studying tumour microenvironmental interactions and cancer field effects with applications in drug discovery and development.