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Published online first on March 17, 2009
[Cancer Research, 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-08-2871]
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0008-5472.CAN-08-2871v1
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Tumor Microenvironment

The EGF/CSF-1 Paracrine Invasion Loop Can Be Triggered by Heregulin {beta}1 and CXCL12

Lorena Hernandez 1, Tatiana Smirnova 1, Dmitriy Kedrin 1, Jeffrey Wyckoff 1, 2, Liyin Zhu 3, 4, E. Richard Stanley 3, Dianne Cox 1, 3, William J. Muller 5, Jeffrey W. Pollard 3, Nico Van Rooijen 6, and Jeffrey E. Segall 1, 2*

1Department of Anatomy and Structural Biology, 2Gruss Lipper Center for Biophotonics, 3Department of Developmental and Molecular Biology, and 4Center of Reproductive Biology and Women's Health, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York; 5Life Sciences Complex, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada; and 6Department of Molecular Cell Biology, Free University Medical Center, Amsterdam, the Netherlands

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: segall{at}aecom.yu.edu.


   Abstract

An important step in the process of metastasis from the primary tumor is invasive spread into the surrounding stroma. Using an in vivo invasion assay, we have previously shown that imposed gradients of epidermal growth factor (EGF) or colony-stimulating factor-1 (CSF-1) can induce invasion through an EGF/CSF-1 paracrine loop between cancer cells and macrophages. We now report that invasion induced by other ligands also relies on this EGF/CSF-1 paracrine invasive loop. Using an in vivo invasion assay, we show that MTLn3 breast cancer cells overexpressing ErbB3 exhibit enhanced invasion compared with control MTLn3 cells in response to the ErbB3 ligand HRG-{beta}1. The invasive response of both MTLn3-ErbB3 and transgenic MMTV-Neu tumors to HRG-{beta}1 is inhibited by blocking EGF receptor, CSF-1 receptor, or macrophage function, indicating that invasiveness to HRG-{beta}1 is dependent on the EGF/CSF-1 paracrine loop. Furthermore, we show that CXCL12 also triggers in vivo invasion of transgenic MMTV-PyMT tumors in an EGF/CSF-1–dependent manner. Although the invasion induced by HRG-{beta}1 or CXCL12 is dependent on the EGF/CSF-1 paracrine loop, invasion induced by EGF is not dependent on HRG-{beta}1 or CXCL12 signaling, showing an asymmetrical relationship between different ligand/receptor systems in driving invasion. Our results identify a stromal/tumor interaction that acts as an engine underlying invasion induced by multiple ligands. [Cancer Res 2009;69(7):OF1–7]

Key Words: invasion, paracrine loop







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Copyright © 2009 by the American Association for Cancer Research.