eLife (Jan 2017)

Matrix-regulated integrin αvβ5 maintains α5β1-dependent desmoplastic traits prognostic of neoplastic recurrence

  • Janusz Franco-Barraza,
  • Ralph Francescone,
  • Tiffany Luong,
  • Neelima Shah,
  • Raj Madhani,
  • Gil Cukierman,
  • Essel Dulaimi,
  • Karthik Devarajan,
  • Brian L Egleston,
  • Emmanuelle Nicolas,
  • R Katherine Alpaugh,
  • Ruchi Malik,
  • Robert G Uzzo,
  • John P Hoffman,
  • Erica A Golemis,
  • Edna Cukierman

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.20600
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6

Abstract

Read online

Desmoplasia, a fibrotic mass including cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) and self-sustaining extracellular matrix (D-ECM), is a puzzling feature of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDACs). Conflicting studies have identified tumor-restricting and tumor-promoting roles of PDAC-associated desmoplasia, suggesting that individual CAF/D-ECM protein constituents have distinguishable tumorigenic and tumor-repressive functions. Using 3D culture of normal pancreatic versus PDAC-associated human fibroblasts, we identified a CAF/D-ECM phenotype that correlates with improved patient outcomes, and that includes CAFs enriched in plasma membrane-localized, active α5β1-integrin. Mechanistically, we established that TGFβ is required for D-ECM production but dispensable for D-ECM-induced naïve fibroblast-to-CAF activation, which depends on αvβ5-integrin redistribution of pFAK-independent active α5β1-integrin to assorted endosomes. Importantly, the development of a simultaneous multi-channel immunofluorescence approach and new algorithms for computational batch-analysis and their application to a human PDAC panel, indicated that stromal localization and levels of active SMAD2/3 and α5β1-integrin distinguish patient-protective from patient-detrimental desmoplasia and foretell tumor recurrences, suggesting a useful new prognostic tool.

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