MicroRNA-200c Attenuates the Tumor-Infiltrating Capacity of Macrophages

Macrophages constitute a major part of the tumor-infiltrating immune cells. Within the tumor microenvironment, they acquire an alternatively activated, tumor-supporting phenotype. Factors released by tumor cells are crucial for the recruitment of tumor-associated macrophages. In the present project,...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biology (Basel, Switzerland) Switzerland), 2022-02, Vol.11 (3), p.349
Hauptverfasser: Raue, Rebecca, Frank, Ann-Christin, Fuhrmann, Dominik C, de la Cruz-Ojeda, Patricia, Rösser, Silvia, Bauer, Rebekka, Cardamone, Giulia, Weigert, Andreas, Syed, Shahzad Nawaz, Schmid, Tobias, Brüne, Bernhard
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Macrophages constitute a major part of the tumor-infiltrating immune cells. Within the tumor microenvironment, they acquire an alternatively activated, tumor-supporting phenotype. Factors released by tumor cells are crucial for the recruitment of tumor-associated macrophages. In the present project, we aimed to understand the role of hsa-miR-200c-3p (miR-200c) in the interplay between tumor cells and macrophages. To this end, we employed a coculture system of MCF7 breast tumor cells and primary human macrophages and observed the transfer of miR-200c from apoptotic tumor cells to macrophages, which required intact CD36 receptor in macrophages. We further comprehensively determined miR-200c targets in macrophages by mRNA-sequencing and identified numerous migration-associated mRNAs to be downregulated by miR-200c. Consequently, miR-200c attenuated macrophage infiltration into 3-dimensional tumor spheroids. miR-200c-mediated reduction in infiltration further correlated with a miR-200c migration signature comprised of the four miR-200c-repressed, predicted targets PPM1F, RAB11FIB2, RDX, and MSN.
ISSN:2079-7737
2079-7737
DOI:10.3390/biology11030349