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KMID : 0620920220540111901
Experimental & Molecular Medicine
2022 Volume.54 No. 11 p.1901 ~ p.1912
Particulate matter promotes cancer metastasis through increased HBEGF expression in macrophages
Park Seung-Ho

Yoon Sung-Jin
Choi Song
Jung Jae-Eun
Park Jun-Young
Park Young-Ho
Seo Jin-Ho
Lee Jung-Woon
Lee Moo-Seung
Lee Seon-Jin
Son Mi-Young
Cho Young-Lai
Kim Jang-Seong
Lee Hyo-Jin
Jeong Jin-Young
Kim Dae-Soo
Park Young-Jun
Abstract
Although many cohort studies have reported that long-term exposure to particulate matter (PM) can cause lung cancer, the molecular mechanisms underlying the PM-induced increase in cancer metastasis remain unclear. To determine whether PM contributes to cancer metastasis, cancer cells were cultured with conditioned medium from PM-treated THP1 cells, and the migration ability of the treated cancer cells was assessed. The key molecules involved were identified using RNA-seq analysis. In addition, metastatic ability was analyzed in vivo by injection of cancer cells into the tail vein and intratracheal injection of PM into the lungs of C57BL/6 mice. We found that PM enhances the expression of heparin-binding EGF-like growth factor (HBEGF) in macrophages, which induces epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) in cancer cells, thereby increasing metastasis. Macrophage stimulation by PM results in activation and subsequent nuclear translocation of the aryl hydrocarbon receptor and upregulation of HBEGF. Secreted HBEGF activates EGFR on the cancer cell surface to induce EMT, resulting in increased migration and invasion in vitro and increased metastasis in vivo. Therefore, our study reveals a critical PM-macrophage-cancer cell signaling axis mediating EMT and metastasis and provides an effective therapeutic approach for PM-induced malignancy.
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