Abstract

Obesity is correlated with breast tumor desmoplasia, leading to diminished chemotherapy response and disease-free survival. Obesity causes chronic, macrophage-driven inflammation within breast tissue, initiated by chemokine ligand 2 (CCL2) signaling from adipose stromal cells. To understand how CCL2-induced inflammation alters breast tumor pathology, we transplanted oncogenically transformed human breast epithelial cells with breast stromal cells expressing CCL2 or empty vector into murine mammary glands and examined tumor formation and progression with time. As tumors developed, macrophages were rapidly recruited, followed by the emergence of cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) and collagen deposition. Depletion of CD11b + myeloid lineage cells early in tumor formation reduced tumor growth, CAF numbers, and collagen deposition. CCL2 expression within developing tumors also enhanced recruitment of myeloid progenitor cells from the bone marrow into the tumor site. The myeloid progenitor cell population contained elevated numbers of fibrocytes, which exhibited platelet-derived growth factor receptor-alpha (PDGFRα)-dependent colony formation and growth in vitro. Together, these results suggest that chronic inflammation induced by CCL2 significantly enhances tumor growth and promotes the formation of a desmoplastic stroma through early recruitment of macrophages and fibrocytes into the tumor microenvironment. Fibrocytes may be a novel target in the tumor microenvironment to reduce tumor fibrosis and enhance treatment responses for obese breast cancer patients.

Highlights

  • Obesity is a global epidemic, and the World Health Organization estimates that obesity rates have nearly tripled since 1975 [1]

  • Mammary tumors were collected after 10 weeks when tumors that formed in stromal vascular fraction (SVF)/CCL2 humanized mammary glands reached 1 cm in diameter

  • Similar to our previous studies [18], tumors grew significantly larger in SVF/CCL2 humanized glands compared to tumors from SVF cells expressing empty vector (SVF/EV)

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Summary

Introduction

Obesity is a global epidemic, and the World Health Organization estimates that obesity rates have nearly tripled since 1975 [1]. At the time of breast cancer diagnosis, obese women frequently have larger, higher grade tumors and an increased risk of metastasis, resulting in shorter disease-free and overall survival [2,3,4]. Breast tumors from obese women demonstrate increased desmoplasia, compared to tumors from lean women [5]. The origins of increased tumor collagen and desmoplasia, in obesity, are not completely understood. Obesity causes a state of chronic, macrophage-driven inflammation, as macrophages are recruited by necrotic adipocytes and form crown-like structures [10,11,12]. This inflammation is in large part driven by the expression of chemokine ligand 2 (CCL2), referred to as monocyte chemoattractant

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