吉非替尼
癌症研究
巨噬细胞
医学
转移
外渗
表皮生长因子受体抑制剂
骨肉瘤
药理学
体外
受体
表皮生长因子受体
生物
癌症
免疫学
内科学
生物化学
作者
Caroline Maloney,Michelle P. Kallis,Morris Edelman,Christopher Tzanavaris,Martin Lesser,Samuel Z. Soffer,Marc Symons,Bettie M. Steinberg
出处
期刊:Molecular Cancer Therapeutics
[American Association for Cancer Research]
日期:2020-06-01
卷期号:19 (6): 1340-1350
被引量:15
标识
DOI:10.1158/1535-7163.mct-19-0903
摘要
Abstract Most patients with osteosarcoma have subclinical pulmonary micrometastases at diagnosis. Mounting evidence suggests that macrophages facilitate metastasis. As the EGFR has been implicated in carcinoma–macrophage cross-talk, in this study, we asked whether gefitinib, an EGFR inhibitor, reduces osteosarcoma invasion and metastatic outgrowth using the K7M2-Balb/c syngeneic murine model. Macrophages enhanced osteosarcoma invasion in vitro, which was suppressed by gefitinib. Oral gefitinib inhibited tumor extravasation in the lung and reduced the size of metastatic foci, resulting in reduced metastatic burden. Gefitinib also altered pulmonary macrophage phenotype, increasing MHCII and decreasing CD206 expression compared with controls. Surprisingly, these effects are mediated through inhibition of macrophage receptor interacting protein kinase 2 (RIPK2), rather than EGFR. Supporting this, lapatinib, a highly specific EGFR inhibitor that does not inhibit RIPK2, had no effect on macrophage-promoted invasion, and RIPK2−/− macrophages failed to promote invasion. The selective RIPK2 inhibitor WEHI-345 blocked tumor cell invasion in vitro and reduced metastatic burden in vivo. In conclusion, our results indicate that gefitinib blocks macrophage-promoted invasion and metastatic extravasation by reprogramming macrophages through inhibition of RIPK2.
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