Global and single-cell proteomics view of the co-evolution between neural progenitors and breast cancer cells in a co-culture model
Bjørnstad, Ole Vidhammer; Carrasco Fernandez, Manuel; Finne, Kenneth; Ardawatia, Vandana; Winge, Ingeborg; Askeland, Cecilie; Arnes, Jarle; Knutsvik, Gøril; Kleftogiannis, Dimitrios; Paulo, Joao A.; Akslen, Lars Andreas; Vethe, Heidrun
Journal article, Peer reviewed
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Date
2024Metadata
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- Department of Clinical Medicine [2233]
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Abstract
Background
Presence of nerves in tumours, by axonogenesis and neurogenesis, is gaining increased attention for its impact on cancer initiation and development, and the new field of cancer neuroscience is emerging. A recent study in prostate cancer suggested that the tumour microenvironment may influence cancer progression by recruitment of Doublecortin (DCX)-expressing neural progenitor cells (NPCs). However, the presence of such cells in human breast tumours has not been comprehensively explored.
Methods
Here, we investigate the presence of DCX-expressing cells in breast cancer stromal tissue from patients using Imaging Mass Cytometry. Single-cell analysis of 372,468 cells across histopathological images of 107 breast cancers enabled spatial resolution of neural elements in the stromal compartment in correlation with clinicopathological features of these tumours. In parallel, we established a 3D in vitro model mimicking breast cancer neural progenitor-innervation and examined the two cell types as they co-evolved in co-culture by using mass spectrometry-based global proteomics.
Findings
Stromal presence of DCX + cells is associated with tumours of higher histological grade, a basal-like phenotype, and shorter patient survival in tumour tissue from patients with breast cancer. Global proteomics analysis revealed significant changes in the proteomic landscape of both breast cancer cells and neural progenitors in co-culture.
Interpretation
These results support that neural involvement plays an active role in breast cancer and warrants further studies on the relevance of nerve elements for tumour progression.