Circulating Tumor Cells as a Window on Metastasis Biology in Lung Cancer

被引:375
|
作者
Hou, Jian-Mei [1 ]
Krebs, Matthew [1 ,2 ,3 ,4 ]
Ward, Tim [1 ]
Sloane, Robert [1 ]
Priest, Lynsey [1 ]
Hughes, Andrew [5 ]
Clack, Glen [5 ]
Ranson, Malcolm [1 ,2 ,3 ,4 ]
Blackhall, Fiona [1 ,2 ,3 ,4 ,6 ]
Dive, Caroline [1 ,2 ,3 ,4 ]
机构
[1] Univ Manchester, Clin & Expt Pharmacol Grp, Manchester, Lancs, England
[2] Univ Manchester, Paterson Inst Canc Res, Sch Canc & Enabling Sci, Manchester, Lancs, England
[3] Univ Manchester, Manchester Canc Res Ctr, Manchester, Lancs, England
[4] Univ Manchester, Manchester Acad Hlth Sci Ctr, Manchester, Lancs, England
[5] Astra Zeneca Pharmaceut, London, Cheshire, England
[6] Christie Hosp Fdn Trust, Manchester, Lancs, England
来源
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PATHOLOGY | 2011年 / 178卷 / 03期
关键词
EPITHELIAL-MESENCHYMAL TRANSITION; PERIPHERAL-BLOOD; COLORECTAL-CANCER; BREAST-CANCER; PROGRESSION; SURVIVAL; INVASION; MECHANISMS; EXPRESSION; APOPTOSIS;
D O I
10.1016/j.ajpath.2010.12.003
中图分类号
R36 [病理学];
学科分类号
100104 ;
摘要
Circulating minor cell (CTC) number in metastatic cancer patients yields prognostic information consistent with enhanced cell migration and invasion via loss of adhesion, a feature of epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT). Tumor cells also invade via collective migration with maintained cell-cell contacts and consistent with this is the circulating tumor microemboli (CTM; contiguous groups of tumor cells) that are observed in metastatic cancer patients. Using a blood filtration approach, we examined markers of EMT (cytokeratins, E-cadherin, vimentin, neural cadherin) and prevalence of apoptosis in CTCs and CTM to explore likely mechanism(s) of invasion in lung cancer patients and address the hypothesis that cells within CTM have a survival advantage. Intra-patient and. inter-patient heterogeneity was observed for EMT markers in CTCs and CTM. Vimentin was only expressed in some CTCs, but in the majority of cells within CTM; E-cadherin expression was lost, cytoplasmic or nuclear, and rarely expressed at the surface of the cells within CTM. A subpopulation of CTCs was apoptotic, but apoptosis was absent within CTM. This pilot study suggests that EMT is not prosecuted homogeneously in tumor cells within the circulation of lung cancer patients and that collective migration and enhanced survival of cells within CTM might contribute to lung cancer metastasis. Multiplex analysis and further detailed exploration of metastatic potential and EMT in CTCs/CTM is now warranted in a larger patient cohort. (Am J Pathol 2011, 178:989-996. DOI: 10.1016/j.ajpath.2010.12.003)
引用
收藏
页码:989 / 996
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Clinical Relevance of Disseminated Tumor Cells in the Bone Marrow and Circulating Tumor Cells in the Blood of Breast Cancer Patients
    Mueller, Volkmar
    Fehm, Tanja
    Janni, Wolfgang
    Gebauer, Gerhard
    Solomayer, Erich
    Pantel, Klaus
    BREAST CARE, 2009, 4 (05) : 333 - 338
  • [32] Biology and significance of circulating and disseminated tumour cells in colorectal cancer
    Steinert, Gunnar
    Schoelch, Sebastian
    Koch, Moritz
    Weitz, Juergen
    LANGENBECKS ARCHIVES OF SURGERY, 2012, 397 (04) : 535 - 542
  • [33] Dissecting Breast Cancer Circulating Tumor Cells Competence via Modelling Metastasis in Zebrafish
    Martinez-Pena, Ines
    Hurtado, Pablo
    Carmona-Ule, Nuria
    Abuin, Carmen
    Belen Davila-Ibanez, Ana
    Sanchez, Laura
    Abal, Miguel
    Chaachou, Anas
    Hernandez-Losa, Javier
    Cajal, Santiago Ramon Y.
    Lopez-Lopez, Rafael
    Pineiro, Roberto
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR SCIENCES, 2021, 22 (17)
  • [34] Mesenchymal phenotype of circulating tumor cells is associated with distant metastasis in breast cancer patients
    Zhang, Shirong
    Wu, Tiecheng
    Peng, Xinguo
    Liu, Jian
    Liu, Fang
    Wu, Shiyang
    Liu, Suyan
    Dong, Yan
    Xie, Shujun
    Ma, Shenglin
    CANCER MANAGEMENT AND RESEARCH, 2017, 9 : 691 - 700
  • [35] EMT in breast cancer metastasis: an interplay of microRNAs, signaling pathways and circulating tumor cells
    Kumar, Aviral
    Golani, Aparna
    Kumar, Lekha Dinesh
    FRONTIERS IN BIOSCIENCE-LANDMARK, 2020, 25 : 979 - 1010
  • [36] Circulating tumor cells and their advances to promote cancer metastasis and relapse, with focus on glioblastoma multiforme
    Chistiakov, Dimitry A.
    Chekhonin, Vladimir P.
    EXPERIMENTAL AND MOLECULAR PATHOLOGY, 2018, 105 (02) : 166 - 174
  • [37] Biology, detection, and clinical implications of circulating tumor cells
    Joosse, Simon A.
    Gorges, Tobias M.
    Pantel, Klaus
    EMBO MOLECULAR MEDICINE, 2015, 7 (01) : 1 - 11
  • [38] Advances in circulating tumor cells for early detection, prognosis and metastasis reduction in lung cancer
    Wang, Xiaochen
    Bai, Lu
    Kong, Linghui
    Guo, Zhijuan
    FRONTIERS IN ONCOLOGY, 2024, 14
  • [39] Circulating and disseminated tumor cells from breast cancer patient-derived xenograft-bearing mice as a novel model to study metastasis
    Giuliano, Mario
    Herrera, Sabrina
    Christiny, Pavel
    Shaw, Chad
    Creighton, Chad J.
    Mitchell, Tamika
    Bhat, Raksha
    Zhang, Xiaomei
    Mao, Sufeng
    Dobrolecki, Lacey E.
    Al-Rawi, Ahmed
    Chen, Fengju
    Veneziani, Bianca M.
    Zhang, Xiang H-F
    Hilsenbeck, Susan G.
    Contreras, Alejandro
    Gutierrez, Carolina
    Jeselsohn, Rinath M.
    Rimawi, Mothaffar F.
    Osborne, C. Kent
    Lewis, Michael T.
    Schiff, Rachel
    Trivedi, Meghana V.
    BREAST CANCER RESEARCH, 2015, 17
  • [40] Emerging Role of Circulating Tumor Cells in Gastric Cancer
    Phung Thanh Huong
    Gurshaney, Sanjeev
    Nguyen Thanh Binh
    Anh Gia Pham
    Huy Hoang Nguyen
    Xuan Thanh Nguyen
    Hai Pham-The
    Phuong-Thao Tran
    Khanh Truong Vu
    Nhuong Xuan Duong
    Pelucchi, Claudio
    La Vecchia, Carlo
    Boffetta, Paolo
    Nguyen, Hung D.
    Luu, Hung N.
    CANCERS, 2020, 12 (03)