Macrophages modulate migration and invasion of human tongue squamous cell carcinoma
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/8650Dato
2015-03-26Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Pirilä, Emma; Väyrynen, Otto; Sundquist, Elias; Päkkilä, Kaisa; Nyberg, Pia; Nurmenniemi, Sini; Pääkkönen, Virve; Pesonen, Paula; Dayan, Dan; Vered, Marilena; Uhlin-Hansen, Lars; Salo, TuulaSammendrag
Oral tongue squamous cell carcinoma (OTSCC) has a high mortality rate and the incidence
is rising worldwide. Despite advances in treatment, the disease lacks specific prognostic
markers and treatment modality. The spreading of OTSCC is dependent on the tumor microenvironment
and involves tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs). Although the presence
of TAMs is associated with poor prognosis in OTSCC, the specific mechanisms
underlying this are still unknown. The aim here was to investigate the effect of macrophages
(Mfs) on HSC-3 tongue carcinoma cells and NF-kappaB activity. We polarized THP-1 cells
to M1 (inflammatory), M2 (TAM-like) and R848 (imidazoquinoline-treated) type Mfs. We
then investigated the effect of Mfs on HSC-3 cell migration and NF-kappaB activity, cytokine
production and invasion using several different in vitro migration models, a human 3D tissue
invasion model, antibody arrays, confocal microscopy, immunohistochemistry and a mouse
invasion model. We found that in co-culture studies all types of Mfs fused with HSC-3 cells,
a process which was partially due to efferocytosis. HSC-3 cells induced expression of epidermal
growth factor and transforming growth factor-beta in co-cultures with M2 Mfs. Direct
cell-cell contact between M2 Mfs and HSC-3 cells induced migration and invasion of HSC-3
cells while M1 Mfs reduced HSC-3 cell invasion. M2 Mfs had an excess of NF-kappaB p50
subunit and a lack of p65 subunits both in the presence and absence of HSC-3 cells, indicating
dysregulation and pro-tumorigenic NF-kappaB activation. TAM-like cells were abundantly
present in close vicinity to carcinoma cells in OTSCC patient samples. We conclude
that M2 Mfs/TAMs have an important role in OTSCC regulating adhesion, migration, invasion
and cytokine production of carcinoma cells favouring tumor growth. These results demonstrate that OTSCC patients could benefit from therapies targeting TAMs, polarizing
TAM-like M2 Mfs to inflammatory macrophages and modulating NF-kappaB activity.