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Merck
CN
  • Integrin-Mediated Macrophage Adhesion Promotes Lymphovascular Dissemination in Breast Cancer.

Integrin-Mediated Macrophage Adhesion Promotes Lymphovascular Dissemination in Breast Cancer.

Cell reports (2019-05-16)
Rachel Evans, Fabian Flores-Borja, Sina Nassiri, Elena Miranda, Katherine Lawler, Anita Grigoriadis, James Monypenny, Cheryl Gillet, Julie Owen, Peter Gordon, Victoria Male, Anthony Cheung, Farzana Noor, Paul Barber, Rebecca Marlow, Erika Francesch-Domenech, Gilbert Fruhwirth, Mario Squadrito, Borivoj Vojnovic, Andrew Tutt, Frederic Festy, Michele De Palma, Tony Ng
摘要

Lymphatic vasculature is crucial for metastasis in triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC); however, cellular and molecular drivers controlling lymphovascular metastasis are poorly understood. We define a macrophage-dependent signaling cascade that facilitates metastasis through lymphovascular remodeling. TNBC cells instigate mRNA changes in macrophages, resulting in β4 integrin-dependent adhesion to the lymphovasculature. β4 integrin retains macrophages proximal to lymphatic endothelial cells (LECs), where release of TGF-β1 drives LEC contraction via RhoA activation. Macrophages promote gross architectural changes to lymphovasculature by increasing dilation, hyperpermeability, and disorganization. TGF-β1 drives β4 integrin clustering at the macrophage plasma membrane, further promoting macrophage adhesion and demonstrating the dual functionality of TGF-β1 signaling in this context. β4 integrin-expressing macrophages were identified in human breast tumors, and a combination of vascular-remodeling macrophage gene signature and TGF-β signaling scores correlates with metastasis. We postulate that future clinical strategies for patients with TNBC should target crosstalk between β4 integrin and TGF-β1.