Abstract

Simple SummaryExtracellular matrix within the tumor microenvironment influences signaling, controls molecular diffusion of nutrients and growth factors, alters immunogenicity, and contributes to disease progression and therapeutic response. ECM is secreted by multiple cell types, including tumor cells, fibroblasts, and immune cells, yet there are limited approaches that link the cell type to the ECM proteins within the heterogeneous tumor microenvironment. Here, we show that integrating immunohistochemistry (IHC) with extracellular matrix (ECM) imaging mass spectrometry allows ECM proteomic profiling based on patterns of diverse cell types and proteins in tissue. The developed approach is demonstrated using phosphatase and tensin homolog (PTEN) staining and ECM imaging/proteomics on the same tissue sections in normal breast and in a tissue microarray of breast tumor and normal adjacent tissue. The data suggests that PTEN expression in tumor and in normal adjacent tissue may be associated with different collagen types and regulation by post-translational sites of modification.Breast stroma plays a significant role in breast cancer risk and progression yet remains poorly understood. In breast stroma, collagen is the most abundantly expressed protein and its increased deposition and alignment contributes to progression and poor prognosis. Collagen post-translation modifications such as hydroxylated-proline (HYP) control deposition and stromal organization. The clinical relevance of collagen HYP site modifications in cancer processes remains undefined due to technical issues accessing collagen from formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded (FFPE) tissues. We previously developed a targeted approach for investigating collagen and other extracellular matrix proteins from FFPE tissue. Here, we hypothesized that immunohistochemistry staining for fibroblastic markers would not interfere with targeted detection of collagen stroma peptides and could reveal peptide regulation influenced by specific cell types. Our initial work demonstrated that stromal peptide peak intensities when using MALD-IMS following IHC staining (αSMA, FAP, P4HA3 and PTEN) were comparable to serial sections of nonstained tissue. Analysis of histology-directed IMS using PTEN on breast tissues and TMAs revealed heterogeneous PTEN staining patterns and suggestive roles in stromal protein regulation. This study sets the foundation for investigations of target cell types and their unique contribution to collagen regulation within extracellular matrix niches.

Highlights

  • Breast cancer affects one in eight women in the United States; in 2016, for every100,000 women, 124 females reported to have breast cancer and of those, 20 women died [1,2]

  • To test that immunohistochemistry staining for cell markers would not interfere with detection of stromal peptides by Imaging Mass Spectrometry (IMS), a workflow was developed towards investigating imaging mass spectral data of previously immunohistochemistry-stained breast tissue (Figure 1)

  • This approach allows an exact comparison of cell marker distribution compared to extracellular matrix patterns of the same tissue section

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Summary

Introduction

Breast cancer affects one in eight women in the United States; in 2016, for every100,000 women, 124 females reported to have breast cancer and of those, 20 women died [1,2]. Breast cancer affects one in eight women in the United States; in 2016, for every. Among women in the US, breast cancer is the second leading cause of cancer death, following lung cancer [2]. Progress has been made in early detection of breast cancer leading to optimistic outcomes with a five-year survival rate of 99% for localized breast cancers [3]. Once the tumor has metastasized, treatments become limited and the five-year survival rate significantly drops to about 27% [3]. The crosstalk between stromal cells and the tumor stroma involved in cancer progression has been widely recognized as related to outcome and therapeutic resistance [4,5,6,7]

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