eLife (Jan 2020)

MYC and Twist1 cooperate to drive metastasis by eliciting crosstalk between cancer and innate immunity

  • Renumathy Dhanasekaran,
  • Virginie Baylot,
  • Minsoon Kim,
  • Sibu Kuruvilla,
  • David I Bellovin,
  • Nia Adeniji,
  • Anand Rajan KD,
  • Ian Lai,
  • Meital Gabay,
  • Ling Tong,
  • Maya Krishnan,
  • Jangho Park,
  • Theodore Hu,
  • Mustafa A Barbhuiya,
  • Andrew J Gentles,
  • Kasthuri Kannan,
  • Phuoc T Tran,
  • Dean W Felsher

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.50731
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

Read online

Metastasis is a major cause of cancer mortality. We generated an autochthonous transgenic mouse model whereby conditional expression of MYC and Twist1 enables hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) to metastasize in >90% of mice. MYC and Twist1 cooperate and their sustained expression is required to elicit a transcriptional program associated with the activation of innate immunity, through secretion of a cytokinome that elicits recruitment and polarization of tumor associated macrophages (TAMs). Systemic treatment with Ccl2 and Il13 induced MYC-HCCs to metastasize; whereas, blockade of Ccl2 and Il13 abrogated MYC/Twist1-HCC metastasis. Further, in 33 human cancers (n = 9502) MYC and TWIST1 predict poor survival (p=4.3×10−10), CCL2/IL13 expression (p<10−109) and TAM infiltration (p<10−96). Finally, in the plasma of patients with HCC (n = 25) but not cirrhosis (n = 10), CCL2 and IL13 were increased and IL13 predicted invasive tumors. Therefore, MYC and TWIST1 generally appear to cooperate in human cancer to elicit a cytokinome that enables metastasis through crosstalk between cancer and immune microenvironment.

Keywords