Nature Communications (Oct 2020)

Interleukin-6 trans-signaling is a candidate mechanism to drive progression of human DCCs during clinical latency

  • Melanie Werner-Klein,
  • Ana Grujovic,
  • Christoph Irlbeck,
  • Milan Obradović,
  • Martin Hoffmann,
  • Huiqin Koerkel-Qu,
  • Xin Lu,
  • Steffi Treitschke,
  • Cäcilia Köstler,
  • Catherine Botteron,
  • Kathrin Weidele,
  • Christian Werno,
  • Bernhard Polzer,
  • Stefan Kirsch,
  • Miodrag Gužvić,
  • Jens Warfsmann,
  • Kamran Honarnejad,
  • Zbigniew Czyz,
  • Giancarlo Feliciello,
  • Isabell Blochberger,
  • Sandra Grunewald,
  • Elisabeth Schneider,
  • Gundula Haunschild,
  • Nina Patwary,
  • Severin Guetter,
  • Sandra Huber,
  • Brigitte Rack,
  • Nadia Harbeck,
  • Stefan Buchholz,
  • Petra Rümmele,
  • Norbert Heine,
  • Stefan Rose-John,
  • Christoph A. Klein

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-18701-4
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 1 – 18

Abstract

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Metastatic dissemination in breast cancer patients occurs early in malignant transformation, raising questions about how disseminated cancer cells (DCC) progress at distant sites. Here, the authors show that DCCs in bone marrow are activated via IL6-trans-signaling and thereby acquire stemness traits relevant for metastasis formation.