Primary tumor associated macrophages activate programs of invasion and dormancy in disseminating tumor cells

Lucia Borriello(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Anouchka Coste(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Brian Traub(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Ved P. Sharma(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), George S. Karagiannis(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Yu Lin(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Yarong Wang(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Xianjun Ye(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Camille L. Duran(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Xiaoming Chen(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Madeline Friedman(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), María Soledad Sosa(Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai), Dan Sun(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Erica Dalla(Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai), Deepak Kumar Singh(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Maja H. Oktay(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Julio A. Aguirre‐Ghiso(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), John S. Condeelis(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), David Entenberg(Albert Einstein College of Medicine)
Nature Communications
February 2, 2022
Cited by 154Open Access
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Abstract

Metastases are initiated by disseminated tumor cells (DTCs) that colonize distant organs. Growing evidence suggests that the microenvironment of the primary tumor primes DTCs for dormant or proliferative fates. However, the manner in which this occurs remains poorly understood. Here, using the Window for High-Resolution Intravital Imaging of the Lung (WHRIL), we study the live lung longitudinally and follow the fate of individual DTCs that spontaneously disseminate from orthotopic breast tumors. We find that spontaneously DTCs have increased levels of retention, increased speed of extravasation, and greater survival after extravasation, compared to experimentally metastasized tumor cells. Detailed analysis reveals that a subset of macrophages within the primary tumor induces a pro-dissemination and pro-dormancy DTC phenotype. Our work provides insight into how specific primary tumor microenvironments prime a subpopulation of cells for expression of proteins associated with dissemination and dormancy.


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