Abstract

Muscle-invasive lethal carcinomas traverse into and through this specialized biophysical and growth factor enriched microenvironment. We will highlight cancers that originate in organs surrounded by smooth muscle, which presents a barrier to dissemination, including prostate, bladder, esophageal, gastric, and colorectal cancers. We propose that the heterogeneity of cell-cell and cell-ECM adhesion receptors is an important driver of aggressive tumor networks with functional consequences for progression. Phenotype heterogeneity of the tumor provides a biophysical advantage for tumor network invasion through the tensile muscle and survival of the tumor network. We hypothesize that a functional epithelial-mesenchymal cooperation (EMC)exists within the tumor invasive network to facilitate tumor escape from the primary organ, invasion and traversing of muscle, and navigation to metastatic sites. Cooperation between specific epithelial cells within the tumor and stromal (mesenchymal) cells interacting with the tumor is illustrated using the examples of laminin-binding adhesion molecules—especially integrins—and their response to growth and inflammatory factors in the tumor microenvironment. The cooperation between cell-cell (E-cadherin, CDH1) and cell-ECM (α6 integrin, CD49f) expression and growth factor receptors is highlighted within poorly differentiated human tumors associated with aggressive disease. Cancer-associated fibroblasts are examined for their role in the tumor microenvironment in generating and organizing various growth factors. Cellular structural proteins are potential utility markers for future spatial profiling studies. We also examine the special characteristics of the smooth muscle microenvironment and how invasion by a primary tumor can alter this environment and contribute to tumor escape via cooperation between epithelial and stromal cells. This cooperative state allows the heterogenous tumor clusters to be shaped by various growth factors, co-opt or evade immune system response, adapt from hypoxic to normoxic conditions, adjust to varying energy sources, and survive radiation and chemotherapeutic interventions. Understanding the epithelial-mesenchymal cooperation in early tumor invasive networks holds potential for both identifying early biomarkers of the aggressive transition and identification of novel agents to prevent the epithelial-mesenchymal cooperation phenotype. Epithelial-mesenchymal cooperation is likely to unveil new tumor subtypes to aid in selection of appropriate therapeutic strategies.

Highlights

  • Several smooth muscle invasive cancers, including prostate, bladder, esophageal, gastric, and colorectal, rank in the top 10 cancers for incidence and deaths (Society AC, 2020)

  • 3.1 The Tumor Microenvironment, ECM, Cancer-Associated Fibroblasts, and Integrins Inter/intracellular communication in the tumor microenvironment (TME) is driven by a complex and adaptive network of cytokines, chemokines, growth factors, inflammatory, and matrix transforming enzymes all existing in tissue that presents with major disruptions to its physical and chemical properties (Balkwill et al, 2012)

  • The evolving epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT) paradigm includes a recent shift in understanding that invasive and metastatic tumor cell clusters contain phenotypic diversity and heterogeneity

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Several smooth muscle invasive cancers, including prostate, bladder, esophageal, gastric, and colorectal, rank in the top 10 cancers for incidence and deaths (Society AC, 2020). As previously reported (Maehira et al, 2019), increased vimentin expression and loss of E-cadherin expression in the cooperative phenotype of tumor clusters results in metastasis, invasion, radio-resistance, and generation of cancer cells with stem cell-like characteristics in pancreatic cancer. Most epithelial cancers involve lost, reduced, or mixed expression of E-cadherin, and with that an assumed loss of cellcell adhesion; it is true that cohesive clusters of tumor cells are the greater source of metastases (Friedl and Gilmour, 2009; Aceto et al, 2015; Cheung and Ewald, 2016; Fang and Kang, 2021), as individual cells do not survive to seed distant sites (Harryman et al, 2016). Gloushankova et al, determined that a hybrid epithelialmesenchymal phenotype (a cooperative phenotype) requires the presence of E-cadherin for cancer cell dissemination, buttressing our hypothesis that E-cadherin and E-cadherinbased adherens junctions (AJs) are necessary for collective invasion and tumor migration (Gloushankova et al, 2017)

The Tumor Microenvironment, ECM, Cancer-Associated Fibroblasts, and
The Biophysical Properties of the Muscle
THE GROWTH FACTORS THAT INFLUENCE TUMOR INTEGRIN FUNCTION IN THE MUSCLE
Findings
CONCLUSION
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