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The colored lines track
selected cells over a time period of 12
hours in a tissue culture model that
recreates the ducts of the mammary gland.
Breast Cancer
cells have to learn to walk before they can
run
Newswise — Early-stage
breast cancer that has not yet invaded the
surrounding tissues may already contain
highly motile cells, bringing the tumor one
step closer to metastasis, report
researchers at the Salk Institute for
Biological Studies.
Their study, published
in the Dec. 30 issue of the Journal of Cell
Biology, suggests that these cells, although
not yet invasive, could wander off along
milk ducts and seed new tumors within the
same breast.
“A lack of invasion
suggested a lack of motility,” says lead
author Gray Pearson, Ph.D, a postdoctoral
researcher in the Molecular and Cell Biology
Laboratory at the Salk, “but that’s not so.”
“This is an exciting
finding because it suggests that cells might
acquire migratory properties much earlier
than expected,” says senior author Tony
Hunter, Ph.D., a professor in the Molecular
and Cell Biology Laboratory.
Due to improved
screening programs, most breast tumors are
discovered at an early stage when they are
still small and confined. In such cases,
cancer cells have not grown into the
surrounding tissues and remain within the
borders of a duct, the most common site
where invasive breast cancer arises. These
tumors are known as DCIS (ductal carcinoma
in situ).
The standard treatment
for DCIS is lumpectomy, the surgical removal
of the tumor and surrounding tissue.
Approximately 16% of
DCIS patients treated with lumpectomy alone
develop recurrent breast cancer growth
within 5 years of treatment.
One of the questions
faced by oncologists and patients is whether
they should add gamma radiation after
undergoing surgery to catch straying tumor
cells and reduce the risk of recurrent
breast cancer. Currently, the decision is
based solely on the size of the tumor.
“Our findings suggest
that, if a DCIS contains these highly motile
cells, the patient may have an increased
risk for recurrent growth,” says Pearson.
“Under these circumstances you would
consider adding radiation treatment
regardless of tumor size.”
While the presence of
highly motile cells may guide treatment
decisions in the future, the researchers
have yet to show that wandering cells do
indeed influence a patient’s outcome,
cautions Pearson.
In their study, the
Salk researchers used a tissue culture model
that recreates the duct of the mammary
gland. They embedded human cells, isolated
from breast tissue, in a three-dimensional
matrix that mimics their natural
surroundings. These cells spontaneously
develop into so called acini, hollow
structures resembling tiny milk ducts.
Then they turned on the
ERK1/2 MAP kinase pathway, a signaling
cascade frequently activated during the
development of tumors, and watched in real
time as breast cancer cells learned how to
walk.
“We quickly realized that there was a
significant cell movement, which was quite
surprising,” recounts Pearson. “Within 24
hours, a large number of these spheres had
lost their organization, and the cells
started to dance around.” (see movie)
While dangerously
invasive cells can squeeze through the
basement membrane and make a run for the
surrounding tissue, motile cells still could
not escape the confines of the ERK-activated
acini.
“But the acquisition of motility
prior to invasion presumably lowers the
barrier for future invasive growth,”
explains Pearson.
“The advent of
live-cell imaging allows us to watch labeled
cells move around in tissues and learn a lot
about their behavior, which wouldn’t be
revealed in cultured cells,” says Hunter.
With the next step,
Pearson hopes to identify molecular markers
for breast cancer cell motility that will
help oncologists to diagnose patients who
are at higher risk of metastasis.
The Salk Institute for
Biological Studies in La Jolla, California,
is an independent nonprofit organization
dedicated to fundamental discoveries in the
life sciences, the improvement of human
health and the training of future
generations of researchers.
Jonas Salk,
M.D., whose polio vaccine all but eradicated
the crippling disease poliomyelitis in 1955,
opened the Institute in 1965 with a gift of
land from the City of San Diego and the
financial support of the March of Dimes.