Breast tumors educate the proteome of stromal tissue in an individualized but coordinated manner

Xuya Wang, Arshag D. Mooradian, Erdmann Gilmore Petra, Qiang Zhang, Rosa Viner, Sherri R. Davies, Kuan Lin Huang, Ryan Bomgarden, Brian A. Van Tine, Jieya Shao, Li Ding, Shunqiang Li, Matthew J. Ellis, John C. Rogers, R. Reid Townsend, David Fenyö, Jason M. Held

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

20 Scopus citations

Abstract

Cancer forms specialized microenvironmental niches that promote local invasion and colonization. Engrafted patientderived xenografts (PDXs) locally invade and colonize naïve stroma in mice while enabling unambiguous molecular discrimination of human proteins in the tumor from mouse proteins in the microenvironment. To characterize how patient breast tumors form a niche and educate naïve stroma, subcutaneous breast cancer PDXs were globally profiled by species-specific quantitative proteomics. Regulation of PDX stromal proteins by breast tumors was extensive, with 35% of the stromal proteome altered by tumors consistently across different animals and passages. Differentially regulated proteins in the stroma clustered into six signatures, which included both known and previously unappreciated contributors to tumor invasion and colonization. Stromal proteomes were coordinately regulated; however, the sets of proteins altered by each tumor were highly distinct. Integrated analysis of tumor and stromal proteins, a comparison made possible in these xenograft models, indicated that the known hallmarks of cancer contribute pleiotropically to establishing and maintaining the microenvironmental niche of the tumor. Education of the stroma by the tumor is therefore an intrinsic property of breast tumors that is highly individualized, yet proceeds by consistent, nonrandom, and defined tumor-promoting molecular alterations.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberaam8065
JournalScience Signaling
Volume10
Issue number491
DOIs
StatePublished - 8 Aug 2017
Externally publishedYes

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