Inflammatory cell-derived CXCL3 promotes pancreatic cancer metastasis through a novel myofibroblast-hijacked cancer escape mechanism

Author:

Sun Xiaoting,He Xingkang,Zhang Yin,Hosaka Kayoko,Andersson Patrik,Wu Jing,Wu Jieyu,Jing Xu,Du Qiqiao,Hui Xiaoli,Ding Bo,Guo Ziheng,Hong An,Liu Xuan,Wang Yan,Ji Qing,Beyaert Rudi,Yang Yunlong,Li Qi,Cao YihaiORCID

Abstract

ObjectivePancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) is the most lethal malignancy and lacks effective treatment. We aimed to understand molecular mechanisms of the intertwined interactions between tumour stromal components in metastasis and to provide a new paradigm for PDAC therapy.DesignTwo unselected cohorts of 154 and 20 patients with PDAC were subjected to correlation between interleukin (IL)-33 and CXCL3 levels and survivals. Unbiased expression profiling, and genetic and pharmacological gain-of-function and loss-of-function approaches were employed to identify molecular signalling in tumour-associated macrophages (TAMs) and myofibroblastic cancer-associated fibroblasts (myoCAFs). The role of the IL-33–ST2–CXCL3–CXCR2 axis in PDAC metastasis was evaluated in three clinically relevant mouse PDAC models.ResultsIL-33 was specifically elevated in human PDACs and positively correlated with tumour inflammation in human patients with PDAC. CXCL3 was highly upregulated in IL-33-stimulated macrophages that were the primary source of CXCL3. CXCL3 was correlated with poor survival in human patients with PDAC. Mechanistically, activation of the IL-33–ST2–MYC pathway attributed to high CXCL3 production. The highest level of CXCL3 was found in PDAC relative to other cancer types and its receptor CXCR2 was almost exclusively expressed in CAFs. Activation of CXCR2 by CXCL3 induced a CAF-to-myoCAF transition and α-smooth muscle actin (α-SMA) was uniquely upregulated by the CXCL3–CXCR2 signalling. Type III collagen was identified as the CXCL3–CXCR2-targeted adhesive molecule responsible for myoCAF-driven PDAC metastasis.ConclusionsOur work provides novel mechanistic insights into understanding PDAC metastasis by the TAM-CAF interaction and targeting each of these signalling components would provide an attractive and new paradigm for treating pancreatic cancer.

Funder

the Karolinska Institute distinguished professor award

the Torsten Soderbergs Foundation

Shanghai Pujiang Program

Swedish Cancer Foundation

the Strategic Research Areas (SFO)–Stem Cell and Regenerative Medicine Foundation

Swedish Children’s Cancer Foundation

the Maud and Birger Gustavsson Foundation

The Program for Professor of Special Appointment

the NOVO Nordisk Foundation-Advance grant

the Knut and Alice Wallenberg’s Foundation

Vetenskapsrådet

the Karolinska Institute Foundation

H2020 European Research Council

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Postgraduate Innovation Training Program of Shanghai University of Traditional Chinese Medicine

Doctor Fund of Shandong Natural Science Foundation

Three-year Plan of Action for the Development of Traditional Chinese Medicine in Shanghai

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Gastroenterology

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