Science and Research

Prostacyclin Released by Cancer-Associated Fibroblasts Promotes Immunosuppressive and Pro-Metastatic Macrophage Polarization in the Ovarian Cancer Microenvironment

Metastasis of high-grade ovarian carcinoma (HGSC) is orchestrated by soluble mediators of the tumor microenvironment. Here, we have used transcriptomic profiling to identify lipid-mediated signaling pathways encompassing 41 ligand-synthesizing enzymes and 23 cognate receptors in tumor, immune and stroma cells from HGSC metastases and ascites. Due to its strong association with a poor clinical outcome, prostacyclin (PGI(2)) synthase (PTGIS) is of particular interest in this signaling network. PTGIS is highly expressed by cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAF), concomitant with elevated PGI(2) synthesis, whereas tumor-associated macrophages (TAM) exhibit the highest expression of its surface receptor (PTGIR). PTGIR activation by PGI(2) agonists triggered cAMP accumulation and induced a mixed-polarization macrophage phenotype with altered inflammatory gene expression, including CXCL10 and IL12A repression, as well as reduced phagocytic capability. Co-culture experiments provided further evidence for the interaction of CAF with macrophages via PGI(2), as the effect of PGI(2) agonists on phagocytosis was mitigated by cyclooxygenase inhibitors. Furthermore, conditioned medium from PGI(2)-agonist-treated TAM promoted tumor adhesion to mesothelial cells and migration in a PTGIR-dependent manner, and PTGIR activation induced the expression of metastasis-associated and pro-angiogenic genes. Taken together, our study identifies a PGI(2)/PTGIR-driven crosstalk between CAF, TAM and tumor cells, promoting immune suppression and a pro-metastatic environment.

  • Sommerfeld, L.
  • Knuth, I.
  • Finkernagel, F.
  • Pesek, J.
  • Nockher, W. A.
  • Jansen, J. M.
  • Wagner, U.
  • Nist, A.
  • Stiewe, T.
  • Müller-Brüsselbach, S.
  • Müller, R.
  • Reinartz, S.

Keywords

  • carcinoma-associated fibroblasts
  • high-grade serous ovarian carcinoma
  • pro-metastatic phenotype
  • prostacyclin
  • signaling network
  • tumor-associated macrophages
Publication details
DOI: 10.3390/cancers14246154
Journal: Cancers (Basel)
Number: 24
Work Type: Original
Location: UGMLC
Disease Area: LC
Partner / Member: UMR
Access-Number: 36551640

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