Chemokine profiling of melanoma–macrophage crosstalk identifies CCL8 and CCL15 as prognostic factors in cutaneous melanoma

During cancer evolution, tumor cells attract and dynamically interact with monocytes/macrophages. To find biomarkers of disease progression in human melanoma, we used unbiased RNA sequencing and secretome analyses of tumor–macrophage co‐cultures. Pathway analysis of genes differentially modulated in...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of pathology 2024-04, Vol.262 (4), p.495-504
Hauptverfasser: Barrio‐Alonso, Celia, Nieto‐Valle, Alicia, García‐Martínez, Elena, Gutiérrez‐Seijo, Alba, Parra‐Blanco, Verónica, Márquez‐Rodas, Iván, Avilés‐Izquierdo, José Antonio, Sánchez‐Mateos, Paloma, Samaniego, Rafael
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:During cancer evolution, tumor cells attract and dynamically interact with monocytes/macrophages. To find biomarkers of disease progression in human melanoma, we used unbiased RNA sequencing and secretome analyses of tumor–macrophage co‐cultures. Pathway analysis of genes differentially modulated in human macrophages exposed to melanoma cells revealed a general upregulation of inflammatory hallmark gene sets, particularly chemokines. A selective group of chemokines, including CCL8, CCL15, and CCL20, was actively secreted upon melanoma–macrophage co‐culture. Because we previously described the role of CCL20 in melanoma, we focused our study on CCL8 and CCL15 and confirmed that in vitro both chemokines contributed to melanoma survival, proliferation, and 3D invasion through CCR1 signaling. In vivo, both chemokines enhanced primary tumor growth, spontaneous lung metastasis, and circulating tumor cell survival and lung colonization in mouse xenograft models. Finally, we explored the clinical significance of CCL8 and CCL15 expression in human skin melanoma, screening a collection of 67 primary melanoma samples, using multicolor fluorescence and quantitative image analysis of chemokine–chemokine receptor content at the single‐cell level. Primary skin melanomas displayed high CCR1 expression, but there was no difference in its level of expression between metastatic and nonmetastatic cases. By contrast, comparative analysis of these two clinically divergent groups showed a highly significant difference in the cancer cell content of CCL8 (p = 0.025) and CCL15 (p 
ISSN:0022-3417
1096-9896
DOI:10.1002/path.6252