Abstract

BackgroundAlterations towards a permissive stromal microenvironment provide important cues for tumor growth, invasion, and metastasis. In this study, Fibroblast activation protein (FAP), a serine protease selectively produced by tumor-associated fibroblasts in over 90% of epithelial tumors, was used as a platform for studying tumor-stromal interactions.We tested the hypothesis that FAP enzymatic activity locally modifies stromal ECM (extracellular matrix) components thus facilitating the formation of a permissive microenvironment promoting tumor invasion in human pancreatic cancer.MethodsWe generated a tetracycline-inducible FAP overexpressing fibroblastic cell line to synthesize an in vivo-like 3-dimensional (3D) matrix system which was utilized as a stromal landscape for studying matrix-induced cancer cell behaviors. A FAP-dependent topographical and compositional alteration of the ECM was characterized by measuring the relative orientation angles of fibronectin fibers and by Western blot analyses. The role of FAP in the matrix-induced permissive tumor behavior was assessed in Panc-1 cells in assorted matrices by time-lapse acquisition assays. Also, FAP+ matrix-induced regulatory molecules in cancer cells were determined by Western blot analyses.ResultsWe observed that FAP remodels the ECM through modulating protein levels, as well as through increasing levels of fibronectin and collagen fiber organization. FAP-dependent architectural/compositional alterations of the ECM promote tumor invasion along characteristic parallel fiber orientations, as demonstrated by enhanced directionality and velocity of pancreatic cancer cells on FAP+ matrices. This phenotype can be reversed by inhibition of FAP enzymatic activity during matrix production resulting in the disorganization of the ECM and impeded tumor invasion. We also report that the FAP+ matrix-induced tumor invasion phenotype is β1-integrin/FAK mediated.ConclusionCancer cell invasiveness can be affected by alterations in the tumor microenvironment. Disruption of FAP activity and β1-integrins may abrogate the invasive capabilities of pancreatic and other tumors by disrupting the FAP-directed organization of stromal ECM and blocking β1-integrin dependent cell-matrix interactions. This provides a novel preclinical rationale for therapeutics aimed at interfering with the architectural organization of tumor-associated ECM. Better understanding of the stromal influences that fuel progressive tumorigenic behaviors may allow the effective future use of targeted therapeutics aimed at disrupting specific tumor-stromal interactions.

Highlights

  • Alterations towards a permissive stromal microenvironment provide important cues for tumor growth, invasion, and metastasis

  • Several studies have shown that Fibroblast activation protein (FAP) expression in human melanoma cell lines or hepatic stellate cells promotes an invasive phenotype through cell adhesion pathways [13,14,15], it is not clear how FAP expressing fibroblast-specific signals prepare a permissive stromal microenvironment and how modified ECMs influence cancer cell behavior in vitro

  • In xenograft mouse models inoculating the human pancreatic cancer cell lines (HPAF-II, Capan-1, AsPC-1, and Panc-1), murine FAP expression was found up-regulated at the tumor stroma (Additional file 1, Fig. S1B). This observation confirmed the existence of a selectivity of FAP expression in tumor-associated fibroblasts and prompted us to believe that perhaps FAP is an attractive protein to study stromal effects imparted upon tumor behaviors

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Summary

Introduction

Alterations towards a permissive stromal microenvironment provide important cues for tumor growth, invasion, and metastasis. The tumor microenvironment is characterized by a heterogeneous complex of cellular and acellular components including tumor-associated fibroblasts, immune and endothelial cells, soluble cytokines, chemokines and proteases, as well as a characteristically remodeled ECM [7]. These components act in a coordinated manner to regulate the growth and differentiation of adjacent cells, alterations in the stromal microenvironment towards a permissive environment provide important cues for tumor growth, invasion, and metastasis [7,8]. Several studies have shown that FAP expression in human melanoma cell lines or hepatic stellate cells promotes an invasive phenotype through cell adhesion pathways [13,14,15], it is not clear how FAP expressing fibroblast-specific signals prepare a permissive stromal microenvironment and how modified ECMs influence cancer cell behavior in vitro

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