Aging And Cns Myeloid Cell Depletion Attenuate Breast Cancer Brain Metastasis

CLINICAL CANCER RESEARCH(2021)

引用 11|浏览21
暂无评分
摘要
Purpose Breast cancer diagnosed in young patients is often aggressive. Because primary breast tumors from young and older patients have similar mutational patterns, we hypothesized that the young host microenvironment promotes more aggressive metastatic disease.Experimental Design: Triple-negative or luminal B breast cancer cell lines were injected into young and older mice side-by-side to quantify lung, liver, and brain metastases. Young and older mouse brains, metastatic and naive, were analyzed by flow cytometry. Immune populations were depleted using antibodies or a colonystimulating factor-1 receptor (CSF-1R) inhibitor, and brain metastasis assays were conducted. Effects on myeloid populations, astrogliosis, and the neuroinflammatory response were determined.Results: Brain metastases were 2- to 4-fold higher in young as compared with older mouse hosts in four models of triple- negative or luminal B breast cancer; no age effect was observed on liver or lung metastases. Aged brains, naive or metastatic, contained fewer resident CNS myeloid cells. Use of a CSF-1R inhibitor to deplete myeloid cells, including both microglia and infiltrating macrophages, preferentially reduced brain metastasis burden in young mice. Downstream effects of CSF-1R inhibition in young mice resembled that of an aged brain in terms of myeloid numbers, induction of astrogliosis, and Semaphorin 3A secretion within the neuroinflammatory response.Conclusions: Host microenvironmental factors contribute to the aggressiveness of triple-negative and luminal B breast cancer brain metastasis. CSF-1R inhibitors may hold promise for young brain metastasis patients.
更多
查看译文
关键词
Brain Metastases,Brain Tumor Epidemiology,Medulloblastoma
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要