Τρίτη 10 Οκτωβρίου 2017

Microenvironment-Driven Shift of Cohesion/Detachment Balance within Tumors Induces a Switch toward Metastasis in Neuroblastoma

Publication date: 9 October 2017
Source:Cancer Cell, Volume 32, Issue 4
Author(s): Céline Delloye-Bourgeois, Lorette Bertin, Karine Thoinet, Loraine Jarrosson, Karine Kindbeiter, Thomas Buffet, Servane Tauszig-Delamasure, Muriel Bozon, Aurélien Marabelle, Valérie Combaret, Christophe Bergeron, Edmund Derrington, Valérie Castellani
Neuroblastoma (NB) is a childhood cancer arising from sympatho-adrenal neural crest cells. Disseminated forms have high frequency of multiple tumoral foci whose etiology remains unknown; NB embryonic origin limits investigations in patients and current models. We developed an avian embryonic model driving human NB tumorigenesis in tissues homologous to patients. We found that aggressive NBs display a metastatic mode, secondary dissemination via peripheral nerves and aorta. Through tumor transcriptional profiling, we found that NB dissemination is induced by the shutdown of a pro-cohesion autocrine signal, SEMA3C, which constrains the tumoral mass. Lowering SEMA3C levels shifts the balance toward detachment, triggering NB cells to collectively evade the tumor. Together with patient cohort analysis, this identifies a microenvironment-driven pro-metastatic switch for NB.

Graphical abstract

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Teaser

Delloye-Bourgeois et al. developed an aggressive human neuroblastoma (NB) model in which NB cells disseminate via peripheral nerves and aorta by placing the cells at their primitive environment in avian embryos. NB dissemination is regulated by a cohesion signaling controlled by SEMA3C via NRP/PLXN complexes.


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