CD36+ Fibroblasts Secrete Protein Ligands That Growth-Suppress Triple-Negative Breast Cancer Cells While Elevating Adipogenic Markers for a Model of Cancer-Associated Fibroblast

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Abstract

Tumor and stroma coevolve to facilitate tumor growth. Hence, effective tumor therapeutics would not only induce growth suppression of tumor cells but also revert pro-tumor stroma into anti-tumoral type. Previously, we showed that coculturing triple-negative or luminal A breast cancer cells with CD36+ fibroblasts (FBs) in a three-dimensional extracellular matrix induced their growth suppression or phenotypic reversion, respectively. Then, we identified SLIT3, FBLN-1, and PENK as active protein ligands secreted from CD36+ FBs that induced growth suppression of MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells and determined their minimum effective concentrations. Here, we have expanded our analyses to include additional triple-negative cancer cell lines, BT549 and Hs578T, as well as HCC1937 carrying a BRCA1 mutation. We show that the ectopic addition of each of the three ligands to cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) elevates the expression of CD36, as well as the adipogenic marker FABP4. Lastly, we show that an agonist antibody for one of the PENK receptors induces growth suppression of all cancer cell lines tested but not for non-transformed MCF10A cells. These results clearly suggest that proteins secreted from CD36+ FBs induce not only growth suppression of tumor cells through binding the cognate receptors but also increasing adipogenic markers of CAFs to reprogram tumor stroma.

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Jabbari, K., Cheng, Q., Winkelmaier, G., Furuta, S., & Parvin, B. (2022). CD36+ Fibroblasts Secrete Protein Ligands That Growth-Suppress Triple-Negative Breast Cancer Cells While Elevating Adipogenic Markers for a Model of Cancer-Associated Fibroblast. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 23(21). https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms232112744

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