Researchers in Israel have discovered that breast tumours can boost their growth by recruiting stromal cells originally formed in the bone marrow.
The study, published in the Journal of Experimental Medicine, reveals that the recruitment of bone marrow-derived fibroblasts lowers the odds of surviving breast cancer, but suggests that targeting these cells could be an effective way of treating the disease.
Within solid tumours, cancer cells are surrounded by other cell types that, though not cancerous themselves, boost tumour growth and metastasis.
Breast tumours, for example, contain large numbers of fibroblast cells that promote cancer cell proliferation, inflammation, and the formation of new blood vessels to supply the growing tumour with nutrients and oxygen.
Many of these cancer-associated fibroblasts are derived from the neighbouring breast tissue, but others seem to come from elsewhere in the body.
Neta Erez and colleagues at the Sackler School of Medicine, Tel Aviv University, discovered that, in mice with breast cancer, a significant number of cancer-associated fibroblasts are derived from bone marrow cells called mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs).
The researchers found that breast tumours can recruit MSCs from the bone marrow and cause them to develop into fibroblasts.
These bone marrow-derived fibroblasts are different from other cancer-associated fibroblasts.
They lack, for example, a key cell signalling protein called PDGFRα.
But bone marrow-derived fibroblasts are particularly effective at stimulating the formation of new blood vessels because they produce large amounts of a protein called clusterin.
Tumours containing bone marrow-derived fibroblasts were therefore more vascularized and grew faster than tumours that only contained breast-derived fibroblasts.
Erez and colleagues found that human breast cancers also contain fibroblasts lacking PDGFRα, suggesting that human tumours may also recruit bone marrow-derived cells.
Moreover, tumours containing lower levels of PDGFRα tended to be more deadly, suggesting that the recruitment of bone marrow-derived fibroblasts is a crucial step in breast cancer progression.
"Our study shows that the recruitment of bone marrow-derived fibroblasts is important for promoting tumour growth, likely by enhancing blood vessel formation," Erez says. "Understanding the function of these cancer-associated fibroblasts could form the basis of developing novel therapeutic manipulations that co-target bone marrow-derived fibroblasts as well as the cancer cells themselves."
Source: Rockefeller University Press