TY - JOUR
T1 - Tumour spheres with inverted polarity drive the formation of peritoneal metastases in patients with hypermethylated colorectal carcinomas
AU - Zajac, Olivier
AU - Raingeaud, Joel
AU - Libanje, Fotine
AU - Lefebvre, Celine
AU - Sabino, Dora
AU - Martins, Isabelle
AU - Roy, Pétronille
AU - Benatar, Clara
AU - Canet-Jourdan, Charlotte
AU - Azorin, Paula
AU - Polrot, Mélanie
AU - Gonin, Patrick
AU - Benbarche, Salima
AU - Souquere, Sylvie
AU - Pierron, Gerard
AU - Nowak, Damien
AU - Bigot, Ludovic
AU - Ducreux, Michel
AU - Malka, David
AU - Lobry, Camille
AU - Scoazec, Jean Yves
AU - Eveno, Clarisse
AU - Pocard, Marc
AU - Perfettini, Jean Luc
AU - Elias, Dominique
AU - Dartigues, Peggy
AU - Goéré, Diane
AU - Jaulin, Fanny
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 The Author(s).
PY - 2018/3/1
Y1 - 2018/3/1
N2 - Metastases account for 90% of cancer-related deaths; thus, it is vital to understand the biology of tumour dissemination. Here, we collected and monitored >50 patient specimens ex vivo to investigate the cell biology of colorectal cancer (CRC) metastatic spread to the peritoneum. This reveals an unpredicted mode of dissemination. Large clusters of cancer epithelial cells displaying a robust outward apical pole, which we termed tumour spheres with inverted polarity (TSIPs), were observed throughout the process of dissemination. TSIPs form and propagate through the collective apical budding of hypermethylated CRCs downstream of canonical and non-canonical transforming growth factor-β signalling. TSIPs maintain their apical-out topology and use actomyosin contractility to collectively invade three-dimensional extracellular matrices. TSIPs invade paired patient peritoneum explants, initiate metastases in mice xenograft models and correlate with adverse patient prognosis. Thus, despite their epithelial architecture and inverted topology TSIPs seem to drive the metastatic spread of hypermethylated CRCs.
AB - Metastases account for 90% of cancer-related deaths; thus, it is vital to understand the biology of tumour dissemination. Here, we collected and monitored >50 patient specimens ex vivo to investigate the cell biology of colorectal cancer (CRC) metastatic spread to the peritoneum. This reveals an unpredicted mode of dissemination. Large clusters of cancer epithelial cells displaying a robust outward apical pole, which we termed tumour spheres with inverted polarity (TSIPs), were observed throughout the process of dissemination. TSIPs form and propagate through the collective apical budding of hypermethylated CRCs downstream of canonical and non-canonical transforming growth factor-β signalling. TSIPs maintain their apical-out topology and use actomyosin contractility to collectively invade three-dimensional extracellular matrices. TSIPs invade paired patient peritoneum explants, initiate metastases in mice xenograft models and correlate with adverse patient prognosis. Thus, despite their epithelial architecture and inverted topology TSIPs seem to drive the metastatic spread of hypermethylated CRCs.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85041571829&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1038/s41556-017-0027-6
DO - 10.1038/s41556-017-0027-6
M3 - Article
C2 - 29403038
AN - SCOPUS:85041571829
SN - 1465-7392
VL - 20
SP - 296
EP - 306
JO - Nature Cell Biology
JF - Nature Cell Biology
IS - 3
ER -