Metastatic breast cancer cells suppress osteoblast adhesion and differentiation

被引:0
作者
Robyn R. Mercer
Chiaki Miyasaka
Andrea M. Mastro
机构
[1] the Pennsylvania State University,Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
[2] the Pennsylvania State University,Department of Engineering Sciences and Mechanics
[3] University of Alabama at Birmingham,National Foundation for Cancer Research, Center for Metastasis Research
[4] Andrea Mastro,undefined
来源
Clinical & Experimental Metastasis | 2004年 / 21卷
关键词
adhesion; bone; breast cancer; differentiation; metastasis; osteoblasts;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Bone is a primary target for colonization of metastatic breast cancer cells. Once present, the breast cancer cells activate osteoclasts, thereby stimulating bone loss. Bone degradation is accompanied by pain and increased susceptibility to fractures. However, targeted inhibition of osteoclasts does not completely prevent lesion progression, nor does it heal the lesions. This suggests that breast cancer cells may also affect osteoblasts, cells that build bone. The focus of this study was to determine the ability of breast cancer cells to alter osteoblast function. MC3T3-E1 osteoblasts were cultured with conditioned medium from MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells and subsequently assayed for changes in differentiation. Osteoblast differentiation was monitored by expression of osteocalcin, bone sialoprotein and alkaline phosphatase, and by mineralization. Osteoblasts cultured with MDA-MB-231 conditioned medium did not express these mature bone proteins, nor did they mineralize a matrix. Inhibition of osteoblast differentiation was found to be due to transforming growth factor β present in MDA-MB-231 conditioned medium. Interestingly, breast cancer conditioned medium also altered cell adhesion. When osteoblasts were assayed for adhesion properties using interference reflection microscopy and scanning acoustic microscopy, there was a reduction in focal adhesion plaques and sites of detachment were clearly visible. F-actin was disassembled and punctate in osteoblasts cultured with MDA-MB-231 conditioned medium rather than organized in long stress fibers. Taken together, these observations suggest that metastatic breast cancer cells alter osteoblast adhesion and prevent differentiation. These affects could account for the continued loss of bone after osteoclast inhibition in patients with bone-metastatic breast cancer.
引用
收藏
页码:427 / 435
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Increased autophagic response in a population of metastatic breast cancer cells
    Li, Yi
    Libby, Emily Falk
    Lewis, Monica J.
    Liu, Jianzhong
    Shacka, John J.
    Hurst, Douglas R.
    ONCOLOGY LETTERS, 2016, 12 (01) : 523 - 529
  • [32] Suffruticosol B Is an Osteogenic Inducer through Osteoblast Differentiation, Autophagy, Adhesion, and Migration
    Yun, Hyung-Mun
    Lee, Joon Yeop
    Kim, Bomi
    Park, Kyung-Ran
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR SCIENCES, 2022, 23 (21)
  • [33] Osteoblast differentiation of equine induced pluripotent stem cells
    Baird, Arabella
    Lindsay, Timothy
    Everett, Alice
    Iyemere, Valentine
    Paterson, Yasmin Z.
    McClellan, Alyce
    Henson, Frances M. D.
    Guest, Deborah J.
    BIOLOGY OPEN, 2018, 7 (05):
  • [34] Effect of MTAD on the Differentiation of Osteoblast-like Cells
    Yasuda, Yoshiyuki
    Tatematsu, Yuki
    Fujii, Shinsuke
    Maeda, Hidefumi
    Akamine, Akifumi
    Torabinejad, Mahmoud
    Saito, Takashi
    JOURNAL OF ENDODONTICS, 2010, 36 (02) : 260 - 263
  • [35] Time to metastatic relapse and breast cancer cells dissemination in bone marrow at metastatic relapse
    François-Clément Bidard
    Anne Vincent-Salomon
    Brigitte Sigal-Zafrani
    Manuel Rodrigues
    Véronique Diéras
    Laurent Mignot
    Xavier Sastre-Garau
    Marie-France Poupon
    Jean-Yves Pierga
    Clinical & Experimental Metastasis, 2008, 25 : 871 - 875
  • [36] Characterization of circulating breast cancer cells with tumorigenic and metastatic capacity
    Koch, Claudia
    Kuske, Andra
    Joosse, Simon A.
    Yigit, Goekhan
    Sflomos, George
    Thaler, Sonja
    Smit, Daniel J.
    Werner, Stefan
    Borgmann, Kerstin
    Gaertner, Sebastian
    Mossahebi Mohammadi, Parinaz
    Battista, Laura
    Cayrefourcq, Laure
    Altmueller, Janine
    Salinas-Riester, Gabriela
    Raithatha, Kaamini
    Zibat, Arne
    Goy, Yvonne
    Ott, Leonie
    Bartkowiak, Kai
    Tan, Tuan Zea
    Zhou, Qing
    Speicher, Michael R.
    Mueller, Volkmar
    Gorges, Tobias M.
    Juecker, Manfred
    Thiery, Jean-Paul
    Brisken, Cathrin
    Riethdorf, Sabine
    Alix-Panabieres, Catherine
    Pantel, Klaus
    EMBO MOLECULAR MEDICINE, 2020, 12 (09)
  • [37] Skeletal Colonization by Breast Cancer Cells Is Stimulated by an Osteoblast and β2AR-Dependent Neo-Angiogenic Switch
    Mulcrone, Patrick L.
    Campbell, J. Preston
    Clement-Demange, Lise
    Anbinder, Ana Lia
    Merkel, Alyssa R.
    Brekken, Rolf A.
    Sterling, Julie A.
    Elefteriou, Florent
    JOURNAL OF BONE AND MINERAL RESEARCH, 2017, 32 (07) : 1442 - 1454
  • [38] Localization of osteoblast inflammatory cytokines MCP-1 and VEGF to the matrix of the trabecula of the femur, a target area for metastatic breast cancer cell colonization
    Karen M. Bussard
    Noriaki Okita
    Neil Sharkey
    Thomas Neuberger
    Andrew Webb
    Andrea M. Mastro
    Clinical & Experimental Metastasis, 2010, 27 : 331 - 340
  • [39] Histone deacetylase inhibitors as differentiation agents in breast cancer cells
    Ismail, H.
    Bail, M.
    Laperriere, D.
    Mader, S.
    FEBS JOURNAL, 2014, 281 : 303 - 303
  • [40] Time to metastatic relapse and breast cancer cells dissemination in bone marrow at metastatic relapse
    Bidard, Francois-Clement
    Vincent-Salomon, Anne
    Sigal-Zafrani, Brigitte
    Rodrigues, Manuel
    Dieras, Veronique
    Mignot, Laurent
    Sastre-Garau, Xavier
    Poupon, Marie-France
    Pierga, Jean-Yves
    CLINICAL & EXPERIMENTAL METASTASIS, 2008, 25 (08) : 871 - 875