ILANIT 2020

Shaping the Inflammatory Niche: Cancer-Associated Fibroblasts Facilitate Breast Cancer Metastasis

Neta Erez Ophir Shani Noam Cohen Yael Raz Ilan Tsarfaty
Sackler Faculty of Medicine, Tel Aviv University, Israel
Mortality from breast cancer is almost exclusively a result of tumor metastasis. Formation of a hospitable microenvironment in the target distant organ is required for the establishment of metastases. Cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) are prominent players in the microenvironment of many primary tumors, including breast cancer. However, the role of CAFs in the formation of a permissive metastatic niche is still largely unresolved. To characterize the co-evolution of CAFs during the formation of lung metastases, we isolated lung fibroblasts in an unbiased manner from normal mice, or from mice with micro- or macro-metastases and profiled their transcriptome by RNA-Seq. Data analysis revealed that fibroblasts in the lung metastatic niche are transcriptionally dynamic and plastic. Characterization of the most prominent transcriptional programs indicated that the main tasks operative in metastases-associated fibroblasts include extracellular matrix remodeling, stress response and shaping the immune milieu at the metastatic niche.








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