Interleukin-6 trans-signaling is a candidate mechanism to drive progression of human DCCs during clinical latency

Melanie Werner‐Klein(University of Regensburg), Ana Grujovic(University of Regensburg), Christoph Irlbeck(Fraunhofer Institute for Toxicology and Experimental Medicine), Milan Obradović(University of Regensburg), Martin Hoffmann(Fraunhofer Institute for Toxicology and Experimental Medicine), Huiqin Koerkel-Qu(University of Regensburg), Xin Lü(Fraunhofer Institute for Toxicology and Experimental Medicine), Steffi Treitschke(Fraunhofer Institute for Toxicology and Experimental Medicine), Cäcilia Köstler(Fraunhofer Institute for Toxicology and Experimental Medicine), Catherine Botteron(Fraunhofer Institute for Toxicology and Experimental Medicine), Kathrin Weidele(Fraunhofer Institute for Toxicology and Experimental Medicine), Christian Werno(Fraunhofer Institute for Toxicology and Experimental Medicine), Bernhard Polzer(Fraunhofer Institute for Toxicology and Experimental Medicine), Stefan Kirsch(Fraunhofer Institute for Toxicology and Experimental Medicine), Miodrag Gužvić(University of Regensburg), Jens Warfsmann(Fraunhofer Institute for Toxicology and Experimental Medicine), Kamran Honarnejad(Fraunhofer Institute for Toxicology and Experimental Medicine), Zbigniew T. Czyż(University of Regensburg), Giancarlo Feliciello(Fraunhofer Institute for Toxicology and Experimental Medicine), Isabell Blochberger(University of Regensburg), Sandra Grunewald(University of Regensburg), Elisabeth V. Schneider(University of Regensburg), Gundula Haunschild(University of Regensburg), Nina Patwary(University of Regensburg), Severin Guetter(University of Regensburg), Sandra Huber(University of Regensburg), Brigitte Rack(LMU Klinikum), Nadia Harbeck(LMU Klinikum), Stefan Buchholz(University Hospital Regensburg), Petra Rümmele(Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg), Norbert Heine(University of Regensburg), Stefan Rose‐John(Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel), Christoph A. Klein(University Hospital Regensburg)
Nature Communications
October 5, 2020
Cited by 57Open Access
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Abstract

Although thousands of breast cancer cells disseminate and home to bone marrow until primary surgery, usually less than a handful will succeed in establishing manifest metastases months to years later. To identify signals that support survival or outgrowth in patients, we profile rare bone marrow-derived disseminated cancer cells (DCCs) long before manifestation of metastasis and identify IL6/PI3K-signaling as candidate pathway for DCC activation. Surprisingly, and similar to mammary epithelial cells, DCCs lack membranous IL6 receptor expression and mechanistic dissection reveals IL6 trans-signaling to regulate a stem-like state of mammary epithelial cells via gp130. Responsiveness to IL6 trans-signals is found to be niche-dependent as bone marrow stromal and endosteal cells down-regulate gp130 in premalignant mammary epithelial cells as opposed to vascular niche cells. PIK3CA activation renders cells independent from IL6 trans-signaling. Consistent with a bottleneck function of microenvironmental DCC control, we find PIK3CA mutations highly associated with late-stage metastatic cells while being extremely rare in early DCCs. Our data suggest that the initial steps of metastasis formation are often not cancer cell-autonomous, but also depend on microenvironmental signals.


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