Abstract

Abstract In the present study, we investigated the relationships between spatiotemporal distribution of growth factors in the lung microenvironment, metastatic osteosarcoma cell signaling, and intratumoral gene expression heterogeneity. Osteosarcoma is an aggressive bone malignancy that commonly metastasizes to the lungs, resulting in significant patient mortality. During metastasis, disseminated cancer cells are exposed to microenvironment-derived growth factors that result in signaling pathway activation. Two such pathways are MAPK/ERK and PI3K/AKT, which regulate complex transcriptional programs underlying cell proliferation and survival decisions. In this study, we utilized precision cut lung slices (PCLS) obtained from mice with established osteosarcoma metastases to ex vivo model associations between the spatiotemporal distributions of growth factors in the lung, osteosarcoma signaling dynamics, and intratumoral gene expression heterogeneity, with single cell precision. To accomplish this, we engineered osteosarcoma cells that co-expressed genetically-encoded ERK and AKT sensors, engrafted them into PCLS tissues, then recorded sensor dynamics via live-cell microscopy. These tissues were subsequently fixed and immuno-stained for measurement of growth factor expression in resident lung cells and spatial correlation with observed tumor cell ERK-AKT signaling dynamics. Using this approach, we found that growth factor expression was diffusely increased within areas bordering osteosarcoma metastases. FGF2 and IGF1, which we have previously demonstrated to potently induce ERK signaling in osteosarcoma cells, were both significantly upregulated in these regions. However, despite relatively uniform overexpression of growth factors adjacent to tumors, individual osteosarcoma cells displayed stochastics patterns of ERK and AKT signaling, and downstream gene targets. These findings revealed that upregulation of lung growth factors, and the inherent systems-level properties of osteosarcoma signaling networks, can converge to promote intratumoral signaling and gene expression heterogeneity. Together, our results, using a novel PCLS and live-cell biosensor imaging approach, provide new insight into how spatial and temporal changes in microenvironmental signaling composition are integrated by metastatic osteosarcoma cells to promote heterogeneity. Citation Format: Rawan Makkawi, Ryan D. Roberts, Jeremy Copperman, Alexander E. Davies. Spatiotemporal analysis of growth factor regulation of osteosarcoma AKT and ERK signaling dynamics in an ex vivo lung metastasis model [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2024; Part 1 (Regular Abstracts); 2024 Apr 5-10; San Diego, CA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2024;84(6_Suppl):Abstract nr 5527.

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