Mammary adipocytes promote breast tumor cell invasion and angiogenesis in the context of menopause and obesity
The mechanism(s) underlying obesity-related postmenopausal (PM) breast cancer (BC) are not clearly understood. We hypothesized that the increased local presence of ‘obese’ mammary adipocytes within the BC microenvironment promotes the acquisition of an invasive and angiogenic BC cell phenotype and a...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Biochimica et biophysica acta. Molecular basis of disease 2024-10, Vol.1870 (7), p.167325, Article 167325 |
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Zusammenfassung: | The mechanism(s) underlying obesity-related postmenopausal (PM) breast cancer (BC) are not clearly understood. We hypothesized that the increased local presence of ‘obese’ mammary adipocytes within the BC microenvironment promotes the acquisition of an invasive and angiogenic BC cell phenotype and accelerates tumor proliferation and progression. BC cells, treated with primary mammary adipocyte secretome from premenopausal (Pre-M) and PM obese women (ObAdCM; obese adipocyte conditioned-media) upregulated the expression of several pro-tumorigenic factors including VEGF, lipocalin-2 and IL-6. Both Pre-M and PM ObAdCM stimulated endothelial cell recruitment and proliferation and significantly stimulated BC cell proliferation, migration and invasion. IL-6 and LCN2 induced STAT3/Akt signaling in BC cells and STAT3 inhibition abrogated the ObAdCM-stimulated BC cell proliferation and migration. Expression of proangiogenic regulators including VEGF, NRP1, NRP2, IL8RB, TGFβ2, and TSP-1 were found to be differentially regulated in mammary adipocytes from obese PM women. Comparative RNAseq indicated an upregulation of PI3K/Akt signaling, ECM-receptor interactions and lipid/fatty acid metabolism in PM versus Pre-M mammary adipocytes. Our results demonstrate that irrespective of menopausal status, cross-talk between obese mammary adipocytes and BC cells promotes tumor aggressiveness and suggest that targeting the LCN2/IL-6/STAT3 signaling axis may be a useful strategy in obesity-driven breast tumorigenesis.
•Mechanisms underlying obesity-related postmenopausal breast cancer are not clearly understood.•In postmenopausal women, a higher BMI is associated with local changes in mammary adipocyte gene expression.•Cross-talk between postmenopausal mammary adipocytes and breast cancer cells promotes an invasive and angiogenic tumor phenotype.•Targeting the LCN2/IL-6/STAT3 signaling axes may be a useful strategy in obesity-driven breast tumorigenesis. |
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ISSN: | 0925-4439 1879-260X 1879-260X |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.bbadis.2024.167325 |