Lung-resident alveolar macrophages regulate the timing of breast cancer metastasis

肺泡巨噬细胞调控乳腺癌转移的时间

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作者:Erica Dalla ,Michael Papanicolaou ,Matthew D Park ,Nicole Barth ,Rui Hou ,Deisy Segura-Villalobos ,Luis Valencia Salazar ,Dan Sun ,Alistair R R Forrest ,Maria Casanova-Acebes ,David Entenberg ,Miriam Merad ,Julio A Aguirre-Ghiso

Abstract

Breast disseminated cancer cells (DCCs) can remain dormant in the lungs for extended periods, but the mechanisms limiting their expansion are not well understood. Research indicates that tissue-resident alveolar macrophages suppress breast cancer metastasis in lung alveoli by inducing dormancy. Through ligand-receptor mapping and intravital imaging, it was found that alveolar macrophages express transforming growth factor (TGF)-β2. This expression, along with persistent macrophage-cancer cell interactions via the TGF-βRIII receptor, maintains cancer cells in a dormant state. Depleting alveolar macrophages or losing the TGF-β2 receptor in cancer cells triggers metastatic awakening. Aggressive breast cancer cells are either suppressed by alveolar macrophages or evade this suppression by avoiding interaction and downregulating the TGF-β2 receptor. Restoring TGF-βRIII in aggressive cells reinstates TGF-β2-mediated macrophage growth suppression. Thus, alveolar macrophages act as a metastasis immune barrier, and downregulation of TGF-β2 signaling allows cancer cells to overcome macrophage-mediated growth suppression.

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