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Podoplanin‐expressing cancer‐associated fibroblasts lead and enhance the local invasion of cancer cells in lung adenocarcinoma
Author(s) -
Neri Shinya,
Ishii Genichiro,
Hashimoto Hiroko,
Kuwata Takeshi,
Nagai Kanji,
Date Hiroshi,
Ochiai Atsushi
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
international journal of cancer
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.475
H-Index - 234
eISSN - 1097-0215
pISSN - 0020-7136
DOI - 10.1002/ijc.29464
Subject(s) - cancer associated fibroblasts , podoplanin , cancer cell , adenocarcinoma , cancer , cancer research , tumor microenvironment , lung cancer , pathology , medicine , immunohistochemistry
Cancer‐associated fibroblasts (CAFs) communicate with cancer cells and play important roles in cancer invasion. We previously reported that local invasion of cancer cells was frequently observed in lung adenocarcinoma patients with podoplanin (PDPN)‐expressing CAFs. However, the underlying mechanisms of this phenomenon have remained unclear. In this study, we established a novel collagen invasion assay model in which cancer cells and CAFs were cocultured; we analyzed the mechanisms governing how cancer cell invasion was promoted by PDPN(+)CAFs. By observing the dynamic movement of both CAFs and cancer cells in the collagen matrix, we found that PDPN(+)CAFs invaded the matrix to a greater extent, with more cancer cells invading within the “tracks” created by the CAFs, compared with control CAFs. The knockdown of PDPN in CAFs decreased the invasion of both the CAFs and the cancer cells. PDPN(+)CAFs displayed a higher RhoA activity and treatment with a ROCK inhibitor cancelled the increased invasion ability of PDPN(+)CAFs and subsequently decreased the number of invaded cancer cells. After intravenous injection in the mouse tail vein, PDPN(+)CAFs invaded and promoted cancer cell invasion into the lung parenchyma, compared with control CAFs. Among the patients with lung adenocarcinoma, we observed some cases with PDPN(+)CAFs at the invasive front of the tumor. These cases predominantly exhibited pleural invasion of cancer cells, known as pathological invasiveness. Our results indicated that PDPN(+)CAFs were tumor‐promoting CAFs that lead and enhance the local invasion of cancer cells, suggesting that the invasion activity of CAFs themselves could be rate‐determining for cancer cell invasion.