The vast majority of breast cancer deaths are due to metastases. These can occur years or decades after removal of the primary tumor, which is mainly due to dormancy of solitary disseminated tumor cells (DTCs). This suggests that there is a rather broad window of opportunity to prevent metastatic outgrowth. However the development of metastasis-preventing therapies is limited by our poor understanding of DTC biology. We previously showed that the bone marrow microenvironment instructs DTCs to enter a persistent dormancy that is induced by high levels of TGF?2 in this microenvironment. In contrast, in the lung microenvironment that contains lower levels of TGF?2, DTC dormancy is short-lived and metastatic growth commonly ensues. Macrophages (M? are known to be crucial for macro-metastasis growth in the lung but their interaction with solitary DTCs and organ-specific functions have hardly been addressed. Our preliminary data indicate that bone M?might be the source of TGF?2 or instruct other stromal cells to make TGF?2 and prevent the growth of mammary carcinoma cells. In contrast, lung M?seem to be required to support DTC growth by at least limiting TGF?2 in this organ. We hypothesize that bone resident M?produce TGF?2 and possibly other dormancy instructing factors whereas lung M? produce factors that promote DTC proliferation or that antagonize TGF?2 production. Our goals are to 1. analyze the effect of lung and bone M?on DTC growth, and 2. identify M?erived factors that mediate the dormancy / growth decision of DTCs by comparing the expression profiles of lung and bone M? Our rationale is that a better understanding of how M?regulate target organ specific dormancy will first identify a stromal cell type instructive of dormancy vs. proliferation and this might lead to the development of therapies that eradicate dormant DTCs and prevent the occurrence of incurable metastases. The R03 mechanism will allow us to test the feasibility of our hypothesis within this small, self-contained research project.

Public Health Relevance

We will study 1) the role of macrophages in regulating the fate of solitary disseminated tumor cells in target organs and 2) the macrophage derived factors that dictate the growth permissive function of lung macrophages vs. the growth restrictive and dormancy inducing capacity of bone marrow macrophages

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Small Research Grants (R03)
Project #
5R03CA191430-02
Application #
8975184
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZCA1)
Program Officer
Woodhouse, Elizabeth
Project Start
2014-12-01
Project End
2016-11-30
Budget Start
2015-12-01
Budget End
2016-11-30
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
2016
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
Department
Internal Medicine/Medicine
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
078861598
City
New York
State
NY
Country
United States
Zip Code
10029
Linde, Nina; Casanova-Acebes, Maria; Sosa, Maria Soledad et al. (2018) Macrophages orchestrate breast cancer early dissemination and metastasis. Nat Commun 9:21
Fluegen, Georg; Avivar-Valderas, Alvaro; Wang, Yarong et al. (2017) Phenotypic heterogeneity of disseminated tumour cells is preset by primary tumour hypoxic microenvironments. Nat Cell Biol 19:120-132
Linde, N; Fluegen, G; Aguirre-Ghiso, J A (2016) The Relationship Between Dormant Cancer Cells and Their Microenvironment. Adv Cancer Res 132:45-71
Hosseini, Hedayatollah; Obradovi?, Milan M S; Hoffmann, Martin et al. (2016) Early dissemination seeds metastasis in breast cancer. Nature :
Goossens, Nicolas; Hoshida, Yujin; Aguirre-Ghiso, Julio A (2015) Origin and interpretation of cancer transcriptome profiling: the essential role of the stroma in determining prognosis and drug resistance. EMBO Mol Med 7:1385-7