Interleukin-32θ inhibits tumor-promoting effects of macrophage-secreted CCL18 in breast cancer

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Title
Interleukin-32θ inhibits tumor-promoting effects of macrophage-secreted CCL18 in breast cancer
Author(s)
T H Pham; Y Bak; Taeho Kwon; S B Kwon; J W Oh; J H Park; Y K Choi; J T Hong; D Y Yoon
Bibliographic Citation
Cell Communication and Signaling, vol. 17, pp. 53-53
Publication Year
2019
Abstract
Background: Tumor-associated macrophages can promote breast cancer metastasis by secreting cytokines and growth factors. Interleukin (IL)-32θ, a newly identified IL-32 isoform, was previously shown to down-regulate various proinflammatory factors of macrophages. Here, we report the presence of IL-32θ in breast cancer tissues and evaluate its effects on macrophage-regulated breast cancer metastasis. Methods: RT-qPCR was used to analyze the mRNA expression of IL-32θ, Chemokine (C-C motif) ligand 18 (CCL18) in breast cancer tissues. In vitro cell-based experiments using IL-32θ-expressing MDA-MB-231 cells were conducted to examine the effects of IL-32θ on metastasis and its molecular signaling. In vivo xenograft, immunohistochemistry, and optical imaging models were generated to support in vitro and clinical findings. Results: The clinical data displayed opposite expression patterns of CCL18 and IL-32θ mRNA in macrophageinfiltrated breast tumor tissues compared with those in the other tissues tested. In MDA-MB-231 cells, IL-32θ overexpression attenuated migration, invasion, tumor-promoting factors, and increased epithelial markers levels upon treatment with conditioned media from THP-1-derived macrophages. Additionally, IL-32θ expression in a xenograft model led to a remarkable decrease in tumor size and macrophage-stimulated tumor promotion. This inhibition was mediated through a direct interaction with protein kinase C-δ (PKCδ), subsequently eliminating the downstream factors STAT3 and NF-κB. Blocking CCL18 during co-culture of macrophages and breast cancer cells reduced the levels of breast cancer progression-related factors and PKCδ downstream signaling suggesting CCL18 as the main macrophage-secreted factors triggering the signaling pathway inhibited by IL-32θ. Conclusions: Our findings demonstrate a novel role of IL-32θ as an intracellular modulator to suppress macrophage-promoted breast cancer progression by targeting CCL18-dependent signaling.
Keyword
IL-32θMacrophageBreast cancer metastasisCCL18PKCδSTAT3
ISSN
1478-811X
Publisher
Springer-BMC
Full Text Link
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12964-019-0374-y
Type
Article
Appears in Collections:
Jeonbuk Branch Institute > Primate Resources Center > 1. Journal Articles
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