Abstract

Abstract Obesity rates are increasing globally, making it of critical importance to study obesity-linked diseases. Breast cancer is the most common cancer in women, and obesity is associated with both increased incidence and metastatic progression of breast cancer. Metastasis formation depends on a cancer cell leaving the primary site, migrating through the bloodstream, and establishing new growth in a distant site. Both metastasizing cell-intrinsic and metastatic site-dependent factors can help to regulate the effectiveness of this process; however, it is unknown whether obesity-linked metastasis depends on changes to the metastasizing cell and/or changes to the distant metastatic site. This study aims to characterize how the lean versus obese tumor microenvironment impacts breast cancer metastasis and identify adipocyte-derived molecules that modulate the metastatic potential of breast cancer cells. We and others have shown that obesity leads to increased metastasis formation in mouse models of orthotopic breast cancer. However, my preliminary data show that an obese metastatic site is not sufficient to increase metastasis formation in an intravenous injection model of metastasis, emphasizing the importance of the primary tumor microenvironment in programming breast cancer cells for metastasis. Cancer cell stemness helps to mediate metastasis formation and can be assessed in vitro with the mammosphere assay. Importantly, my data demonstrate that a secreted lipid from lean, but not obese, adipocytes potently inhibits the ability of breast cancer cells to form mammospheres. Furthermore, this inhibition induces a G1/S cell cycle arrest. Together, these data suggest that lean adipocytes in the breast cancer tumor microenvironment act in a paracrine manner to decrease the metastatic potential of breast cancer cells. My work demonstrates the role of adipocytes in the regulation of metastasis in breast cancer and provides important insight into the role of the tumor microenvironment in mediating metastasis in lean versus obese conditions. Citation Format: Abigail E. Jackson, Keren I Hilgendorf. Lean adipocyte-derived lipid decreases metastatic potential of breast cancer cells [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the AACR Special Conference in Cancer Research: Tumor-body Interactions: The Roles of Micro- and Macroenvironment in Cancer; 2024 Nov 17-20; Boston, MA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2024;84(22_Suppl):Abstract nr B031.

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