There is an ever increasing amount of evidence to support the hypothesis that complement C1q, the first component of the classical complement pathway, is involved in the regulation of cancer growth, in addition to its role in fighting infections. It has been demonstrated that C1q is expressed in the microenvironment of various types of human tumors, including breast adenocarcinomas. This study compares carcinogenesis progression in C1q deficient (neuT-C1KO) and C1q competent neuT mice in order to investigate the role of C1q in mammary carcinogenesis. Significantly accelerated autochthonous neuC carcinoma progression was paralleled by accelerated spontaneous lung metastases occurrence in C1q deficient mice. Surprisingly, this effect was not caused by differences in the tumor-infiltrating cells or in the activation of the complement classical pathway, since neuT-C1KO mice did not display a reduction in C3 fragment deposition at the tumor site. By contrast, a significant higher number of intratumor blood vessels and a decrease in the activation of the tumor suppressor WW domain containing oxidoreductase (WWOX) were observed in tumors from neuT-C1KO as compare with neuT mice. In parallel, an increase in Her2/neu expression was observed on the membrane of tumor cells. Taken together, our findings suggest that C1q plays a direct role both on halting tumor angiogenesis and on inducing apoptosis in mammary cancer cells by coordinating the signal transduction pathways linked to WWOX and, furthermore, highlight the role of C1q in mammary tumor immune surveillance regardless of complement system activation.

The non-inflammatory role of C1q during Her2/neu-driven mammary carcinogenesis

BANDINI, SILVIO;MACAGNO, MARCO;LANZARDO, Stefania;CONTI, Laura;RICCARDO, FEDERICA;RUIU, ROBERTO;MERIGHI, Irene Fiore;FORNI, Guido;QUAGLINO, Elena
Co-last
;
CAVALLO, Federica
Co-last
2016-01-01

Abstract

There is an ever increasing amount of evidence to support the hypothesis that complement C1q, the first component of the classical complement pathway, is involved in the regulation of cancer growth, in addition to its role in fighting infections. It has been demonstrated that C1q is expressed in the microenvironment of various types of human tumors, including breast adenocarcinomas. This study compares carcinogenesis progression in C1q deficient (neuT-C1KO) and C1q competent neuT mice in order to investigate the role of C1q in mammary carcinogenesis. Significantly accelerated autochthonous neuC carcinoma progression was paralleled by accelerated spontaneous lung metastases occurrence in C1q deficient mice. Surprisingly, this effect was not caused by differences in the tumor-infiltrating cells or in the activation of the complement classical pathway, since neuT-C1KO mice did not display a reduction in C3 fragment deposition at the tumor site. By contrast, a significant higher number of intratumor blood vessels and a decrease in the activation of the tumor suppressor WW domain containing oxidoreductase (WWOX) were observed in tumors from neuT-C1KO as compare with neuT mice. In parallel, an increase in Her2/neu expression was observed on the membrane of tumor cells. Taken together, our findings suggest that C1q plays a direct role both on halting tumor angiogenesis and on inducing apoptosis in mammary cancer cells by coordinating the signal transduction pathways linked to WWOX and, furthermore, highlight the role of C1q in mammary tumor immune surveillance regardless of complement system activation.
2016
5
12
e1253653
e1253653-13
http://www.tandfonline.com/loi/koni20
C1q; Complement; ErbB2; genetically engineered mice; Her2/neu; immunosurveillance; mammary cancer; Immunology and Allergy; Immunology; Oncology
Bandini, Silvio; Macagno, Marco; Hysi, Albana; Lanzardo, Stefania; Conti, Laura; Bello, Amanda; Riccardo, Federica; Ruiu, Roberto; Merighi, Irene Fiore; Forni, Guido; Iezzi, Manuela; Quaglino, Elena; Cavallo, Federica
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
Bandini et al., Oncoimmunol, 2016.pdf

Accesso aperto

Tipo di file: PDF EDITORIALE
Dimensione 2.36 MB
Formato Adobe PDF
2.36 MB Adobe PDF Visualizza/Apri

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2318/1624036
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? 22
  • Scopus 29
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 27
social impact