Abstract
Nonresolving chronic inflammation at the neoplastic site is consistently associated with promoting tumor progression and poor patient outcomes. However, many aspects behind the mechanisms that establish this tumor-promoting inflammatory microenvironment remain undefined. Using bladder cancer (BC) as a model, we found that CD14-high cancer cells express higher levels of numerous inflammation mediators and formlarger tumors comparedwith CD14-low cells. CD14 antigen is a glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol (GPI)-linked glycoprotein and has been shown to be critically important in the signaling pathways of Toll-like receptor (TLR). CD14 expression in this BC subpopulation of cancer cells is required for increased cytokine production and increased tumor growth. Furthermore, tumors formed by CD14-high cells are more highly vascularized with higher myeloid cell infiltration. Inflammatory factors produced by CD14-high BC cells recruit and polarize monocytes and macrophages to acquire immunesuppressive characteristics. In contrast, CD14-low BC cells have a higher baseline cell division rate than CD14-high cells. Importantly, CD14-high cells produce factors that further increase the proliferation of CD14-low cells. Collectively, we demonstrate that CD14-high BC cellsmay orchestrate tumor-promoting inflammation and drive tumor cell proliferation to promote tumor growth.
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Cheah, M. T., Chen, J. Y., Sahoo, D., Contreras-Trujillo, H., Volkmer, A. K., Scheeren, F. A., … Weissman, I. L. (2015). CD14-expressing cancer cells establish the inflammatory and proliferative tumor microenvironment in bladder cancer. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 112(15), 4725–4730. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1424795112
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