Frontiers in Oncology (Aug 2020)

Adipose Tissue Properties in Tumor-Bearing Breasts

  • Isabelle Miran,
  • Dominique Scherer,
  • Dominique Scherer,
  • Pauline Ostyn,
  • Chafika Mazouni,
  • Françoise Drusch,
  • Marine Bernard,
  • Emilie Louvet,
  • Julien Adam,
  • Marie-Christine Mathieu,
  • Mariam Haffa,
  • Mariam Haffa,
  • Jean-Philippe Antignac,
  • Bruno Le Bizec,
  • Philippe Vielh,
  • Philippe Dessen,
  • Hervé Perdry,
  • Suzette Delaloge,
  • Jean Feunteun

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2020.01506
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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The tissue stroma plays a major role in tumors' natural history. Most programs for tumor progression are not activated as cell-autonomous processes but under the conditions of cross-talks between tumor and stroma. Adipose tissue is a major component of breast stroma. This study compares adipose tissues in tumor-bearing breasts to those in tumor-free breasts with the intention of defining a signature that could translate into markers of cancer risk. In tumor-bearing breasts, we sampled adipose tissues adjacent to, or distant from the tumor. Parameters studied included: adipocytes size and density, immune cell infiltration, vascularization, secretome and gene expression. Adipose tissues from tumor-bearing breasts, whether adjacent to or distant from the tumor, do not differ from each other by any of these parameters. By contrast, adipose tissues from tumor-bearing breasts have the capacity to secrete twice as much interleukin 8 (IL-8) than those from tumor-free breasts and differentially express a set of 137 genes of which a significant fraction belongs to inflammation, integrin and wnt signaling pathways. These observations show that adipose tissues from tumor-bearing breasts have a distinct physiological status from those from tumor-free breasts. We propose that this constitutive status contributes as a non-cell autonomous process to determine permissiveness for tumor growth.

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