Miles Fayth L, Sikes Robert A
Center for Translational Cancer Research, University of Delaware, 326 Wolf Hall, Biology, Newark, DE 19716.
Mol Cancer Res. 2014 Mar;12(3):297-312. doi: 10.1158/1541-7786.MCR-13-0535. Epub 2014 Jan 22.
Reciprocal interactions between tumor and stromal cells propel cancer progression and metastasis. A complete understanding of the complex contributions of the tumor stroma to cancer progression necessitates a careful examination of the extracellular matrix (ECM), which is largely synthesized and modulated by cancer-associated fibroblasts. This structurally supportive meshwork serves as a signaling scaffold for a myriad of biologic processes and responses favoring tumor progression. The ECM is a repository for growth factors and cytokines that promote tumor growth, proliferation, and metastasis through diverse interactions with soluble and insoluble ECM components. Growth factors activated by proteases are involved in the initiation of cell signaling pathways essential to invasion and survival. Various transmembrane proteins produced by the cancer stroma bind the collagen and fibronectin-rich matrix to induce proliferation, adhesion, and migration of cancer cells, as well as protease activation. Integrins are critical liaisons between tumor cells and the surrounding stroma, and with their mechano-sensing ability, induce cell signaling pathways associated with contractility and migration. Proteoglycans also bind and interact with various matrix proteins in the tumor microenvironment to promote cancer progression. Together, these components function to mediate cross-talk between tumor cells and fibroblasts ultimately to promote tumor survival and metastasis. These stromal factors, which may be expressed differentially according to cancer stage, have prognostic utility and potential. This review examines changes in the ECM of cancer-associated fibroblasts induced through carcinogenesis, and the impact of these changes on cancer progression. The implication is that cancer progression, even in epithelial cancers, may be based in large part on changes in signaling from cancer-associated stromal cells. These changes may provide early prognostic indicators to further stratify patients during treatment or alter the timing of their follow-up visits and observations.
肿瘤细胞与基质细胞之间的相互作用推动癌症进展和转移。要全面了解肿瘤基质对癌症进展的复杂作用,就需要仔细研究细胞外基质(ECM),它主要由癌症相关成纤维细胞合成和调节。这种结构支持性网络作为无数有利于肿瘤进展的生物过程和反应的信号支架。细胞外基质是生长因子和细胞因子的储存库,它们通过与可溶性和不可溶性细胞外基质成分的多种相互作用促进肿瘤生长、增殖和转移。蛋白酶激活的生长因子参与侵袭和生存所必需的细胞信号通路的启动。癌症基质产生的各种跨膜蛋白与富含胶原蛋白和纤连蛋白的基质结合,诱导癌细胞的增殖、黏附和迁移,以及蛋白酶激活。整合素是肿瘤细胞与周围基质之间的关键联络者,凭借其机械传感能力,诱导与收缩性和迁移相关的细胞信号通路。蛋白聚糖也在肿瘤微环境中与各种基质蛋白结合并相互作用,以促进癌症进展。这些成分共同作用,介导肿瘤细胞与成纤维细胞之间的相互作用,最终促进肿瘤存活和转移。这些基质因子可能根据癌症阶段而有差异地表达,具有预后价值和潜力。本综述研究了致癌过程中癌症相关成纤维细胞的细胞外基质变化,以及这些变化对癌症进展的影响。这意味着癌症进展,即使在上皮癌中,可能在很大程度上基于癌症相关基质细胞信号的变化。这些变化可能提供早期预后指标,以便在治疗期间进一步对患者进行分层,或改变他们随访和观察的时间。