The Sympathetic Nervous System Induces a Metastatic Switch in Primary Breast Cancer
By: Sloan EK, Priceman SJ, Cox BF, Yu S, Pimentel MA, Tangkanangnukul V, Arevalo JM, Morizono K, Karanikolas BD, Wu L, Sood AK, Cole SW.

Authors' Affiliations: UCLA Norman Cousins Center at the Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior, Department of Medicine, Division of Hematology-Oncology, UCLA School of Medicine, UCLA AIDS Institute, Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center, UCLA Department of Molecular and Medical Pharmacology, and UCLA Molecular Biology Institute, Los Angeles, California; and Departments of Gynecologic Oncology and Cancer Biology, M.D. Anderson Comprehensive Cancer Center, Houston, Texas.
Cancer Res. 2010 Sep 7.

Abstract

Metastasis to distant tissues is the chief driver of breast cancer-related mortality, but little is known about the systemic physiologic dynamics that regulate this process. To investigate the role of neuroendocrine activation in cancer progression, we used in vivo bioluminescence imaging to track the development of metastasis in an orthotopic mouse model of breast cancer. Stress-induced neuroendocrine activation had a negligible effect on growth of the primary tumor but induced a 30-fold increase in metastasis to distant tissues including the lymph nodes and lung. These effects were mediated by beta-adrenergic signaling, which increased the infiltration of CD11b(+)F4/80(+) macrophages into primary tumor parenchyma and thereby induced a prometastatic gene expression signature accompanied by indications of M2 macrophage differentiation. Pharmacologic activation of beta-adrenergic signaling induced similar effects, and treatment of stressed animals with the beta-antagonist propranolol reversed the stress-induced macrophage infiltration and inhibited tumor spread to distant tissues. The effects of stress on distant metastasis were also inhibited by in vivo macrophage suppression using the CSF-1 receptor kinase inhibitor GW2580. These findings identify activation of the sympathetic nervous system as a novel neural regulator of breast cancer metastasis and suggest new strategies for antimetastatic therapies that target the beta-adrenergic induction of prometastatic gene expression in primary breast cancers. Cancer Res; 70(18); 7042-52. (c)2010 AACR.

PMID: 20823155 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher] Source: National Library of Medicine.







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