Back to Search Start Over

Data from Melanoma-Secreted Amyloid Beta Suppresses Neuroinflammation and Promotes Brain Metastasis

Authors :
Eva Hernando
Robert J. Schneider
Shane A. Liddelow
Kelly V. Ruggles
Beatrix Ueberheide
Ronald B. DeMattos
Paul Mathews
Yue-Ming Li
Iman Osman
Youssef Zaim Wadghiri
George Jour
Robert Rogers
Melissa Call
Eleazar C. Vega y Saenz de Miera
Jenny Chen
James A. Tranos
Nicole M. Eskow
Gillian Baptiste
Alfredo Floristán
Richard Von Itter
Diana Argibay
Alcida Karz
Francisco Galán-Echevarría
Eitan Wong
Avantika Dhabaria
Sorin A.A. Shadaloey
Lili M. Blumenberg
Indigo V.L. Rose
Grace Levinson
Kevin Kleffman
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), 2023.

Abstract

Brain metastasis is a significant cause of morbidity and mortality in multiple cancer types and represents an unmet clinical need. The mechanisms that mediate metastatic cancer growth in the brain parenchyma are largely unknown. Melanoma, which has the highest rate of brain metastasis among common cancer types, is an ideal model to study how cancer cells adapt to the brain parenchyma. Our unbiased proteomics analysis of melanoma short-term cultures revealed that proteins implicated in neurodegenerative pathologies are differentially expressed in melanoma cells explanted from brain metastases compared with those derived from extracranial metastases. We showed that melanoma cells require amyloid beta (Aβ) for growth and survival in the brain parenchyma. Melanoma-secreted Aβ activates surrounding astrocytes to a prometastatic, anti-inflammatory phenotype and prevents phagocytosis of melanoma by microglia. Finally, we demonstrate that pharmacologic inhibition of Aβ decreases brain metastatic burden.Significance:Our results reveal a novel mechanistic connection between brain metastasis and Alzheimer's disease, two previously unrelated pathologies; establish Aβ as a promising therapeutic target for brain metastasis; and demonstrate suppression of neuroinflammation as a critical feature of metastatic adaptation to the brain parenchyma.This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 1171

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....95cccf7e3d8e14c4df1cb91f4fe232b6
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1158/2159-8290.c.6549617