Abstract
Introduction
The immune system plays a major role in cancer progression. In solid tumors, 5-40 % of the tumor mass consists of tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) and there is usually a correlation between the number of TAMs and poor prognosis, depending on the tumor type. TAMs usually resemble M2 macrophages. Unlike M1-macrophages which have pro-inflammatory and anti-cancer functions, M2-macrophages are immunosuppressive, contribute to the matrix-remodeling, and hence favor tumor growth. The role of TAMs is not fully understood in breast cancer progression.
Methods
Macrophage infiltration (CD68) and activation status (HLA-DRIIα, CD163) were evaluated in a large cohort of human primary breast tumors (562 tissue microarray samples), by immunohistochemistry and scored by automated image analysis algorithms. Survival between groups was compared using the Kaplan-Meier life-table method and a Cox multivariate proportional hazards model. Macrophage education by breast cancer cells was assessed by ex vivo differentiation of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) in the presence or absence of breast cancer cell conditioned media (MDA-MB231, MCF-7 or T47D cell lines) and M1 or M2 inducing cytokines (respectively IFN-γ, IL-4 and IL-10). Obtained macrophages were analyzed by flow cytometry (CD14, CD16, CD64, CD86, CD200R and CD163), ELISA (IL-6, IL-8, IL-10, monocyte colony stimulating factor M-CSF) and zymography (matrix metalloproteinase 9, MMP-9).
Results
Clinically, we found that high numbers of CD163+ M2-macrophages were strongly associated with fast proliferation, poor differentiation, estrogen receptor negativity and histological ductal type (p<0.001) in the studied cohort of human primary breast tumors. We demonstrated ex vivo that breast cancer cell-secreted factors modulate macrophage differentiation toward the M2 phenotype. Furthermore, the more aggressive mesenchymal-like cell line MDA-MB231, which secretes high levels of M-CSF, skews macrophages toward the more immunosuppressive M2c subtype.
Conclusions
This study demonstrates that human breast cancer cells influence macrophage differentiation and that TAM differentiation status correlates with recurrence free survival, thus further emphasizing that TAMs can similarly affect therapy efficacy and patient outcome.
Electronic supplementary material
The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13058-015-0621-0) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
Introduction
Metastasis is often explained with the ‘seed and soil’ theory. Conceptually, it implies that the cancer cell (seed) undergoes epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT), invades vessels, becomes a circulating tumor cell (CTC), migrates, extravasates, undergoes mesenchymal to epithelial transition, and eventually colonizes distant sites as a disseminating tumor cell (DTC). ‘Soil’ relates to tumor microenvironment elements which contribute to these processes, making the distant sites permissive to colonization by CTCs or DTCs [1].
The immune system is a major player in the cancer cell/tumor microenvironment crosstalk. In solid tumors, 5−40 % of the tumor mass consists of tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs). Approximately 80 % of the publications in this field report an association between TAMs and poor prognosis [2, 3]. In humans macrophage polarization is a continuum that spans two extremes from the classically activated M1 macrophages to the alternatively activated M2 macrophages. M1 macrophages derive from interferon γ (IFN-γ) or lipopolysaccharide (LPS) stimuli and secrete inflammatory cytokines (e.g., IL-6, IL-12, reactive oxygen species (ROS), reactive nitrogen species (RN) and TNF-α). The validated surface-markers of human M1 macrophages include high levels of CD14 and CD16, CD64, CD86 and HLA-DRα [4, 5]. M2 macrophages, can be further divided into M2a, M2b and M2c macrophages. M2a macrophages arise from IL-4 or IL-13 stimuli and release matrix-remodeling cytokines. Elevated expression of CD200R and CD86 is a validated phenotypic marker of M2a macrophages [4, 5]. M2b macrophages result from the recognition of immune complexes in combination with IL-1β or LPS stimuli and like M2a macrophages, they are involved in wound healing. The immunosuppressive M2c-macrophages are the outcome of IL-10, TGF-β (transforming growth factor β), glucocorticoids or immune complex rich environments. M2c macrophages generate further IL-10 and matrix-remodeling factors such as matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) [4, 5]. Elevated CD163 expression is a validated marker of M2c polarization [5].
TAMs, a macrophage population recruited and educated by tumor cells, which are therefore exposed to IL-10, TGF-β, M-CSF (monocyte colony stimulating factor) [6] and other immunosuppressive stimuli [7], are more closely related to the M2 type [8]. In the tumor microenvironment, TAMs will preferentially perform trophic and immunosuppressive rather than immune effector tasks [3, 9, 10]. Hence, TAMs promote epithelial outgrowth and invasion, which are common features of development and cancer [3, 9]. Wickoff et al. have shown that mammary tumors exhibit a paracrine loop between TAMs and cancer cells. TAMs express monocyte colony stimulating factor receptor (M-CSFR, also known as CSF-1R or cFMS), which binds monocyte colony stimulating factor (M-CSF, also known as CSF-1) secreted by cancer cells. Conversely, TAMs secrete epidermal growth factor (EGF) and activate the EGF receptor (EGFR) on the cancer cells. This allows co-migration of the two cell types, thus, enhancing motility and subsequent invasion of healthy surrounding tissue and intravasation [11, 12]. Also, breast cancer cell leucocyte receptor, vascular cell adhesion molecule 1 (VCAM1) binding to TAM α4-integrin explains the increased survival of VCAM1+ tumor cells in leucocyte-rich environments [13].
Like their phenotype and interactions with tumor cells, the location of TAMs in relation to hypoxic areas is a key parameter controlling tumor growth. In addition to the perivascular TAMs, which take part in cancer cell invasion [11, 12], TAMs are also recruited into hypoxic areas [14]. Within these avascular areas TAMs alter their gene expression profile, favoring a pro-tumor M2 phenotype [15]. This may explain why in the early stages [16] of cancers of the lung [17], colon [18] and stomach [19], the macrophages in the normoxic milieu display an M1 phenotype and are associated with good prognosis.
Immunohistopathological breast carcinoma studies with restricted numbers of samples (n = 53 and 120, respectively) reveal a gradual increase in the amount of infiltrating macrophages (CD68+) from normal breast tissue to benign proliferative breast disease, ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) and infiltrating ductal carcinoma [20, 21]. Two larger studies (n = 1,322 and 168, respectively) confirmed that CD68+ macrophages were associated with higher tumor grade, estrogen receptor (ER) and progesterone receptor (PR) negativity, human epithelial growth factor receptor 2 (HER-2) positivity and a basal phenotype, but led to the conclusion that CD68 expression was not an independent prognostic factor [22, 23]. Another breast cancer cohort study (n = 144), looking at total macrophage number (CD68+) and M2 macrophages (CD163+) found that CD163 was also associated with other prognostic markers [24]. It showed that CD68+ cells in the tumor stroma but not in the tumor nest were an independent prognostic factor for decreased cancer-specific survival, accounting for the localization of TAMs in the tumors more than their mere presence. Triple-negative/basal-like breast tumor stroma had more CD163+ and CD68+ cells and a higher proportion of CD163 relative to CD68 when compared to the stroma of luminal A tumors. This indicates a predominance of mature M2 macrophages and possibly immature myeloid-derived cells (MDCs, also CD163+) in triple-negative disease [24].
Several clinical studies have found an association between macrophage infiltration and angiogenesis in breast cancer [22, 25–28]. However, in relation to prognosis it is unanimous that larger studies of macrophage subpopulations are needed. This study intends to fill that gap. Focusing on the expression of M1 and M2 markers in samples from a large cohort of patients with breast cancer (n = 562), we looked for possible associations with tumor progression. Additionally, by studying the ex vivo differentiation of human macrophages in the presence of breast cancer conditioned media (CM), we aimed to find possible mechanisms of TAM education. To achieve these aims, we revisited tissue microarrays from a large cohort [29] of early human breast tumors of different subtypes, grades and aggressiveness and used different breast cancer cell lines.
Methods
Human samples
TMA samples (n = 562 out of 1,199 patients from the FinXX study, NCT00114816 [29]) were studied retrospectively. Clinicopathological characteristics of the sub-cohort are described in Table 1. Formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tumor samples were used for TMA. Blocks were made using a 1.0-mm tissue cylinder through a histologically representative area of each donor tumor block. From each donor block, 2–4 cores were cut and 15 TMA blocks were prepared, each containing 61–84 tumor samples plus 2–3 liver samples as positive controls.
Table 1.
Factor | Entire series | CD68a | P b | CD163a | P b | HLA-Drαa | P b | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
≤369 | >369 | ≤167.5 | >167.5 | ≤107 | >107 | |||||
n = 562 | n = 277 | n = 274 | n = 270 | n = 267 | n = 280 | n = 275 | ||||
Age, years | ||||||||||
≤50 | 213 | 95 | 113 | 105 | 98 | 112 | 100 | |||
>50 | 349 | 182 | 161 | 0.093 | 165 | 169 | 0.602 | 168 | 175 | 0.378 |
Tumor size median | ||||||||||
≤22 mm | 283 | 144 | 132 | 137 | 129 | 140 | 138 | |||
>22 mm | 278 | 132 | 142 | 0.348 | 132 | 138 | 0.545 | 139 | 137 | 1.000 |
N.A. | 1 | |||||||||
Nodal status | ||||||||||
pN0 | 65 | 27 | 37 | 28 | 33 | 37 | 28 | |||
pN+ | 497 | 250 | 237 | 0.169 | 242 | 234 | 0.468 | 243 | 247 | 0.267 |
Histological type | ||||||||||
Ductal | 399 | 181 | 211 | 171 | 213 | 204 | 192 | |||
Lobular | 110 | 66 | 43 | 69 | 33 | 47 | 60 | |||
Other | 53 | 30 | 20 | 0.010 | 30 | 21 | <0.001 | 29 | 23 | 0.274 |
Histological grade | ||||||||||
Grade 1 | 46 | 33 | 13 | 26 | 16 | 20 | 25 | |||
Grade 2 | 264 | 138 | 119 | 153 | 97 | 127 | 132 | |||
Grade 3 | 250 | 106 | 140 | 0.001 | 91 | 152 | <0.001 | 131 | 118 | 0.518 |
N.A. | 2 | |||||||||
ER status | ||||||||||
Positive | 405 | 215 | 181 | 214 | 171 | 191 | 207 | |||
Negative | 157 | 62 | 93 | 0.003 | 56 | 96 | <0.001 | 89 | 68 | 0.065 |
HER-2 status | ||||||||||
Positive | 170 | 85 | 83 | 72 | 93 | 93 | 77 | |||
Negative | 392 | 192 | 191 | 0.920 | 198 | 174 | 0.040 | 187 | 198 | 0.183 |
Biological group | ||||||||||
ER+, HER-2− | 314 | 165 | 142 | 173 | 123 | 139 | 168 | |||
ER+, HER2+ | 91 | 50 | 39 | 41 | 48 | 52 | 39 | |||
ER-, HER2+ | 79 | 35 | 44 | 31 | 45 | 41 | 38 | |||
ER-, HER2− | 78 | 27 | 49 | 0.015 | 25 | 51 | <0.001 | 48 | 30 | 0.032 |
Ki67 | ||||||||||
≤20 % | 271 | 149 | 116 | 158 | 96 | 124 | 140 | |||
>20 % | 242 | 104 | 134 | 0.005 | 92 | 144 | <0.001 | 126 | 116 | 0.252 |
N.A. | 49 |
Results are presented as number of patients. aThe cutoff values used correspond to the median values of number of positive cells in the entire series. bChi-square test. ER estrogen receptor, HER-2 human epidermal growth factor receptor 2, N.A. not available
Immunohistochemical analysis
Sections (4-μm) of the TMA blocks were stained using standard immunohistochemical techniques for the expression of CD68 (anti-SA2 antibody clone 3C6, Abcam, Cambridge, UK), CD163 (clone 10D6, Novocastra, Newcastle, UK) and HLA-DRα (Dako, Glostrup, Denmark) [30, 31] (detailed information provided in Additional file 1). All the stained TMA slides were scanned using an Olympus virtual microscope equipped with Dotslide using the 10× objective (Olympus BX51, Olympus, Munich, Germany), and AxioCam camera (Zeiss, Jena, Germany). Positively stained cells were counted using Fiji equipment version 1.48s (Wayne Rasband, NIH). After color deconvolution for hematoxylin and 3,3’-Diaminobenzidine (DAB), the threshold was set for macrophage visualization. The size limit for particle analysis was carefully chosen to include only macrophages. Damaged samples were excluded from the analysis. The data were analyzed in a double-blinded fashion. The investigators were blinded to the identity and clinical pathological characteristics of each sample while analyzing/scoring the macrophage content and differentiation status. The final numbers of positive cells per marker, per sample were passed on to hypothesis-naïve investigators who performed the statistical analysis of the cohort.
Cell culture
Human breast cancer cell lines MCF-7, MDA-MB231 and T47D, obtained from American Type Culture Collection (ATCC), were grown in Roswell Park Memorial Institure (RPMI)-1640 medium (Sigma-Aldrich, St Louis, MO, USA) supplemented with 10 % fetal bovine serum (FBS) (Gibco, Grand Island, NY, USA) and 100 IU/ml penicillin and streptomycin (Gibco, Bleiswijk, Netherlands) at 37 °C in a 5 % CO2 atmosphere. After reaching confluence, cell culture medium was changed to medium containing only 1 % FBS and kept in culture for 72 h. At the end of the culture period, the CM were collected from at least three independent cell line batches from each cell type. The CM were centrifuged for 5 minutes at 2,800 g, aliquoted and frozen at −20 °C. CM were used as 50 % supplement of the macrophage differentiation culture medium together with 10 % FBS. The cell lines were recently authenticated by STR (Short tandem repeat) profiling by a certified cell line authentication service (DDC Medical, Fisher Scientific, London, UK). Mycoplasma detection was performed on a routine basis by 4’,6-Diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) staining of cultured cells.
Peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC) isolation
PBMCs from five different donors were isolated by centrifugation over Ficoll gradient (Sigma-Aldrich, St Louis, MO, USA). CD14+ cells were magnetically labeled with α-CD14 microbeads and positively selected by MACS technology (Miltenyi Biotec, Cologne, Germany).
Macrophage differentiation
To obtain M1, M2a and M2c macrophages, CD14+ monocytes were cultured in MEM (Lonza, Basel, Switzerland) supplemented with 10 % FBS (Gibco, Grand Island, NY, USA) (control, CTR), with IFN-γ (50 ng/ml; M1), or IL-4 (50 ng/ml; M2a), or IL-10 (50 ng/ml; M2c) for 5 days with replacement of half of the culture media at day 3 [32]. To assess the effect of breast cancer cell-line-secreted factors, the same differentiation protocol was carried out in the presence or absence of 50 % CM from MDA-MB231, MCF-7 or T47D cells. For activation status experiments (ELISA), cells were treated with LPS (10 ng/ml, Sigma-Aldrich, St Louis, MO, USA) for one additional day. Unless otherwise stated, all the used cytokines were from R&D Systems (Minneapolis, MN, USA). Supernatants were collected, centrifuged for 5 minutes at 2,800 g, aliquoted and stored at −20 °C until further analysis. Cells were harvested with Accutase (Invitrogen, Paisley, UK), debris were removed by centrifugation (5 minutes at 400 g), and cells were used for flow cytometry analysis. Supernatants were used for ELISA and zymography.
Flow cytometry
Ex vivo polarized macrophages were analyzed by validated flow cytometry methods [5], with the BD LSR II flow cytometer (BD Biosciences, Erembodegem-Dorp, Belgium). In brief, cells were washed with PBS 0.1 % BSA (Sigma-Aldrich, St Louis, MO, USA) and before staining, Fc receptors were blocked with FcR blocking reagent (BD Biosciences, Erembodegem-Dorp, Belgium): 0.2 × 106 cells were incubated with adequate antibody mixes and washed prior to analysis. Surface-marker expression was analyzed with flow cytometry using the following fluorochrome-labeled monoclonal antibodies: CD14-APC-Cy7 (clone61D3; eBioscience, Paris, France), CD16-PE-Cy7 (clone DJ130c; AbD Serotec, Kidlington, UK), CD64-AF488 (clone 10.1; BioLegend, San Diego, CA, USA), CD200R-PE (clone OX108; AbD Serotec, Kidlington, UK), CD163-AF647 (clone GHI/61; BD Pharmingen, Erembodegem-Dorp, Belgium), and CD86-AF488 (clone IT2.2, BD Pharmingen, Erembodegem-Dorp, Belgium). Equivalent amounts of isotype-matched control antibodies and unstained cells were included in all experiments as negative and autofluorescence controls. Data were analyzed with BD FACSDiva software, after gating on the myeloid population in the FSC/SSC plot. Values were expressed as the percent ratio of the median fluorescence intensity (MedFI) of the marker of interest over the MedFI of the unstained cells.
ELISA
LPS-activated macrophage culture supernatants were used in ELISA for quantification of h-IL-10, h-IL-8, and h-IL-6 according to the manufacturer’s instructions (R&D systems). h-M-CSF was quantified in breast cancer cell line CM (Duo set, R&D systems, Minneapolis, MN, USA).
Zymography
The potential proteolytic activity of MMPs in the supernatants of the obtained macrophages was determined by zymography as previously described [33]. The stained polyacrylamide-gelatin gels were observed with the Image Quant RT ECL imager. Densitometry of the bands corresponding to pro-MMP-9 activity (92 kDa) was performed using Fiji equipment version 1.48s (Wayne Rasband, NIH). Presented values are the optical densities of pro-MMP-9-digested bands normalized to the total protein content of the corresponding total cell lysate compared with the density of the equivalent background area.
Statistics
TMA results were analyzed with SAS version 8.2 for Windows (SAS Institute, Cary, NC, USA) using the median values of the numbers of positive cells in the entire series as the cutoff value. Frequency tables were analyzed using the chi-square (χ2) test. Survival between groups was compared using the Kaplan-Meier life-table method and a Cox multivariate proportional hazards model. The log-rank test was used to confirm the robustness of the analysis. The subgroup analyses were performed including the macrophage markers, the subgroup variable, and their interaction in the Cox model. The Mann-Whitney or Kruskal-Wallis tests were applied when suitable. All P values are two-sided and are not adjusted for multiple testing. Experimental data were expressed as median ± SD, unless otherwise indicated. The Kruskal-Wallis test followed by Dunn’s post hoc test was employed to calculate statistically significant differences between the CTR and the various conditions, using GraphPad Prism software.
Study approval
Permission to use the tissues from the FinXX study for research purposes was provided by the Finnish Ministry of Social Affairs and Health. The ethics committee at the Helsinki University Central Hospital (Helsinki, Finland) approved the FinXX study and the current study (permission HUS 35/13/03/02/2015). Ethical approval for the use of peripheral blood from healthy donors was obtained from the Nantes University Hospital Ethics Committee. Samples were obtained from the Établissement Français du Sang with informed consent (agreement reference NTS 2000–24, Avenant n°10).
Online supplemental material
A supplemental table (Additional file 1) and supplemental figures (Additional files 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6) are available online.
Results
Clinical significance of TAM numbers and differentiation status in breast cancer patients
To explore the clinical relevance of TAM differentiation in breast cancer patients, we evaluated total TAM number (CD68), M1 TAM (HLA-DRα) and M2 TAM (CD163) in a large human breast cancer TMA cohort. There was heterogeneity among the patients in the expression levels of the different macrophage markers (Fig. 1). M2 macrophage number, identified as the umber of CD163+ cells, was strongly associated with fast proliferation (Ki67 positivity >20 %), poor differentiation (grade 3), ER negativity and histological ductal type (Table 2). None of the individual markers (CD68, HLA-DRα or CD163) was on its own strongly correlated with prognosis, recurrence-free survival (RFS) or overall survival (Additional file 2). In the multivariate Cox model for RFS, markers such as Ki67 positivity >20 %, node positivity and primary tumor size >22 mm were strongly significant predictive factors (p <0.001 for tumor size and <0.01 for the other factors). In the same model CD163 was a significant factor (p = 0.011) together with other model covariates, such as ER negativity (Table 3).
Table 2.
Factor | N = 551 | CD68+ median (range) | P a | N = 537 | CD163+ median (range) | P a | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Histological type | ||||||||
Ductal | 392 | 418 | (0–3634) | 384 | 208 | (2–1772) | ||
Lobular | 109 | 249 | (1–3113) | 102 | 106 | (3–802) | ||
Other | 50 | 265 | (0–1397) | <0.001 | 51 | 127 | (4–1359) | <0.001 |
Histological grade | ||||||||
Grade 1 | 46 | 240 | (18–3113) | 42 | 125 | (5–524) | ||
Grade 2 | 257 | 337 | (0–3634) | 250 | 115 | (2–1229) | ||
Grade 3 | 246 | 436 | (0–2595) | <0.001 | 243 | 265 | (3–1772) | <0.001 |
N.A. | 2 | 2 | ||||||
ER status | ||||||||
Positive | 396 | 340 | (0–3634) | 385 | 131 | (2–1772) | ||
Negative | 155 | 435 | (0–2595) | 0.006 | 152 | 268 | (6–1743) | <0.001 |
HER-2 status | ||||||||
Positive | 168 | 363 | (9–2673) | 165 | 221 | (2–1772) | ||
Negative | 383 | 369 | (0–3634) | 0.900 | 372 | 148 | (3–1359) | 0.002 |
Biological group | ||||||||
ER+, HER-2− | 307 | 334 | (0–3634) | 296 | 124 | (3–1359) | ||
ER+, HER-2+ | 89 | 343 | (12–2673) | 89 | 200 | (2–1772) | ||
ER-, HER-2+ | 79 | 424 | (9–1306.5) | 76 | 227 | (7–1743) | ||
ER-, HER-2− | 76 | 484 | (0–2595) | 0.023 | 76 | 289 | (6–1111) | <0.001 |
Ki67 | ||||||||
≤20 % | 265 | 318 | (0–3634) | 254 | 115 | (2–1772) | ||
>20 % | 238 | 431 | (0–2794) | 0.002 | 236 | 263 | (3–1743) | <0.001 |
N.A. | 48 | 47 |
aMann-Whitney or Kruskal-Wallis test. ER estrogen receptor, HER-2 human epidermal growth factor receptor 2, N.A. not available
Table 3.
Variables | Regression coefficent | Standard error | Regression coefficient/standard error | χ 2 | P | Exp (Coef) | 95 % CI | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Lower | Upper | |||||||
ER+ | −0.612 | 0.252 | −2.430 | 5.903 | 0.0151 | 0.542 | 0.331 | 0.888 |
HER-2+ | 0.050 | 0.239 | 0.211 | 0.045 | 0.8326 | 1.052 | 0.659 | 1.679 |
Ki67 >20% | −0.711 | 0.269 | −2.642 | 6.981 | 0.0082 | 0.491 | 0.290 | 0.832 |
Node positivity | −1.096 | 0.394 | −2.780 | 7.730 | 0.0054 | 0.334 | 0.154 | 0.724 |
Size >22 mm | −0.865 | 0.237 | −3.657 | 13.372 | 0.0003 | 0.421 | 0.265 | 0.669 |
Histological grade 3 | −0.071 | 0.268 | −0.266 | 0.071 | 0.7899 | 0.931 | 0.550 | 1.575 |
CD163 >167.5 | 0.580 | 0.229 | 2.531 | 6.408 | 0.0114 | 1.786 | 1.140 | 2.798 |
ER estrogen receptor, HER-2 human epidermal growth factor receptor 2, Coef regression coefficient, χ 2 chi-squared, Exp(Coef) hazard ratio
Human breast cancer cells condition ex vivo differentiation and activation of human macrophages
As a proof of concept, we showed that the isolated CD14+ cells could be differentiated to M1 (high CD64, high IL-6 secretion), M2a (high CD200R and CD86, low IL-6 and high IL-8 secretion) and M2c macrophages (high CD163, low IL-6 and high IL-10 secretion), respectively, using IFN-γ, IL-4 and IL-10, thus, demonstrating their proven [34] ex vivo plasticity (Figs. 2, 3 and 4 and Additional file 3). Considering M1 differentiation in the presence of IFN-γ, none of the CM affected the expression levels of M1 surface-markers (Additional file 4) nor the secretion profile (data not shown).
CD14+ cells differentiated in the presence of MDA-MB231 CM alone yielded an M2 macrophage population (Fig. 2a-e). This result was most obvious in terms of CD86, CD200R and CD163 expression levels (Fig. 2c-e). The differentiation only in the presence of other CM retained the control phenotype features (Fig. 2a-e and Additional file 3).
Macrophages differentiated in the presence of MDA-MB231 CM produced higher amounts of IL-6, IL-8, IL-10 (Fig. 3a-c) and MMP-9 (Fig. 3j-k) than the CTR or other CM. That scenario remained true when the cells were concomitantly treated with IL-4 (Fig. 3d-f) or IL-10 (Fig. 3g-i), except for IL-6 secretion in the latter treatment (Fig. 3g).
MDA-MB231 cells secrete large amounts of M-CSF, skewing macrophages to an M2c-like phenotype
The strong effects of the MDA-MB231 cells led us to inspect all the CM for dissimilarly secreted macrophage-differentiating factors. We saw no differences in terms of IL-10, transforming growth factor (TGF)-β or IL-4 (data not shown), but only MDA-MB231 cells secreted high amounts of M-CSF (Fig. 2f).
CD14+ cells differentiated in the presence of IL-10 and MDA-MB231 or T47D CM (Fig. 2g-i and Additional file 5) showed a decrease in CD14 expression levels when compared to cells differentiated only with IL-10 (CTR, Fig. 2g). MDA-MB231 CM significantly increased CD163 expression levels (Fig. 2i). The macrophages treated with IL-10 and MDA-MB231 CM secreted more IL-8, IL-10 and MMP-9 than the CTR IL-10-treated macrophages (Fig. 3g-k).
Human breast cancer cells affect M2a macrophage differentiation, rendering macrophages to a mixed M2a/M2c phenotype
When exposed to IL-4, two major macrophage subpopulations arose in all the conditions: CD14lo/C16lo and CD14hi/CD16hi (Fig. 4). In the presence of breast cancer cell line CM, the relative percentage of each of these subpopulations changed. Instead of a predominance of the CD14lo/C16lo population (CTR, Fig. 4a), there was a statistically significant inversion toward a predominance of the CD14hi/CD16hi population (Fig. 4a), especially in the presence of MDA-MB231 (p <0.0005) or T47D CM (p <0.05). MCF-7 CM showed the same trend reaching equilibrium between the two subpopulations not significantly statistically different from the subpopulation distribution in the CTR (IL-4 alone). The detailed analysis of the surface-markers from those subpopulations indicated that MDA-MB231 and T47D CM increase CD14 (Fig. 4b) and decrease CD86 overall expression (Fig. 4j). MDA-MB231 CM increases CD16 (Fig. 4d), CD163 (Fig. 4f) and CD200R expression (Fig. 4h). These fluctuations are mostly due to the CD14hi/CD16hi population (Fig. 4c, e, g, i, k) and the results were statistically significant for the global expression (Fig. 4b, d, f, h, j; p <0.05). Although not statistically significant, MCF-7 CM induced the same trend as T47D CM (Fig. 4a-k).
Only MDA-MB231 CM affected cytokine and MMP-9 secretion, reflecting the exceptionality of this cell line (Fig. 3d-f, j, k). MDA-MB231 CM in the IL-4 condition increased IL-10 secretion (Fig. 3f), and increased IL-6, IL-8 (Fig. 3d, e) and MMP-9 secretion (Fig. 3j, k). If compared to MDA-MB231 CM alone, IL-4 combined with MDA-MB231 CM decreased the secretion of IL-6, IL-8 and MMP-9 and increased IL-10 secretion (Fig. 3a-c and Fig. 3j, k). Overall, MDA-MB231 CM in the presence of IL-4 produced a macrophage subpopulation with an intermediate/mixed M2a/M2c phenotype (Additional file 6), with an abundant production of the immunosuppressive M2c-inducing cytokine IL-10. These macrophages retain matrix-remodeling properties by secreting MMP-9. The possibility that the MCF-7 or T47D CM-induced CD14hi/CD16hi macrophage subpopulations also secrete different levels of cytokines should not be discarded. Those more subtle differences may be masked by the higher titers produced by the MDA-MB231-CM-induced CD14hi/CD16hi subpopulations.
Discussion
Clinical significance of TAM numbers and differentiation status in breast cancer patients
In this study CD163+ cells in primary breast tumor tissue were brought up as a negative prognosis factor for RFS. However, we could not precisely determine which would be the additional interacting factors involved in this effect. It is clear that CD163 correlates with known factors to be associated with a bad prognosis, such as ER negativity, poor differentiation (grade 3) and ductal type (Tables 1 and 2). Previous studies have shown that higher tumor grade [22] and higher Ki67 index are associated with increased CD68+ macrophage infiltration in breast tumors [23, 35]. It was suggested that highly proliferative high-grade tumors elicit an active immune response that further supports angiogenesis and tumor growth. Further, these high-grade tumors may secrete higher levels of macrophage-recruiting/modulating cytokines such as M-CSF (ex vivo results, Fig. 2f), IL-10 and/or TGF-β [6], which is in agreement with the high number of CD163+ M2-macrophages. A study exploring stromal gene signatures in DCIS and invasive breast cancer found that higher grade ER-negative and PR-negative tumors are associated with macrophage responses [36]. Macrophage infiltration was present early in the tumor progression at the DCIS stage, and the majority of cases remained positive in matched invasive breast cancer cases, accounting for early macrophage recruitment in breast cancer progression [36]. Although widely accepted as a specific monocyte/macrophage marker, CD163 can also be expressed by immature MDCs, which include myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs), known to favor tumor progression [24]. Therefore, we cannot exclude the possibility that a percentage of the CD163+ cells detected may in fact be MDSCs, which could account for the poor prognostic role of CD163.
Differential ex vivo conditioning of human macrophage differentiation and activation by different breast cancer cell types
Levano et al. [7] explored the cytokine receptor profile of different breast cancer cell types and found that basal-like cells (e.g., MDA-MB231) express preferentially granulocyte monocyte colony stimulating factor (GM-CSF), hepatocyte growth factor receptor (HGFR, also known as c-MET), CD44, epithelial growth factor receptor (EGFR), transforming growth factor receptor 2 (TGFR2) and oncostatin M receptor (OSMR). Luminal-type breast cancer cells (e.g., MCF-7 and T47D) express RET (a proto-oncogene which encodes for a receptor tyrosine kinase for members of the glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor) [7] and leukemia inhibitory factor (LIF) [37]. This suggests that TAMs have a different influence depending on the tumor subtype, as breast cancer cells will have different receptors for TAM-derived factors [7]. Further, mesenchymal or epithelial-like breast cancer cells respond to or influence TAMs differently. It has been shown that mesenchymal-like breast cancer cells secrete GM-CSF to activate macrophages to a CCL18-expressing TAM-like phenotype and, reciprocally, these TAM-like macrophages sustain the EMT of cancer cells [38]. These findings are not totally unexpected when considering the role of macrophages in mammary gland development during embryogenesis, puberty, pregnancy and lactation. Macrophages in the mammary gland were proven essential in supporting and activating mammary stem cells necessary for normal morphogenesis [39], branching [9] and in the postpartum-related influx of M2 macrophages [10]. All these developmental processes occur via mechanisms similar to molecular cancer mechanisms, such as vascular endothelial growth factor A (VEGF-A)-stimulated angiogenesis. Additionally, TAMs secrete EGF, TNF-α, VEGF and basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) and have reduced antigen presenting ability. Also the release of IL-10 by both tumor cells and TAMs immunosuppresses cytotoxic T-lymphocytes (CTLs) [9].
A study of murine and human macrophage polarization profiles showed that M-CSF-differentiated human macrophages are pro-M2, meaning that LPS or IFN-γ stimulation can still induce an M1 response. However, if stimulated with IL-4 or IL-10 they become more M2 type than the basal macrophages [40]. M-CSF induces CD163 expression in macrophages which, when LPS-stimulated, secrete higher levels of IL-12p40, TNF-α and IL-6 [34]. Our MDA-MB231 cells produce copious amounts of M-CSF (Fig. 2f), in levels similar to clinical samples and MDA-MB231 cells, as reported previously [6]. Similarly, the monocyte shift toward M2/CD163+ TAMs by increased levels of M-CSF has been seen in other tumor types such as glioma [41], clear cell renal carcinoma [42], ovarian carcinoma [43] and a mouse model of osteosarcoma [44]. In those tumor types, the elevated M-CSF and CD163 expression correlates with higher tumor grade [41, 42].
CD163 is a monocyte/macrophage-restricted scavenger receptor. It clears hemoglobin/haptoglobin complexes, hence protecting tissues from hemoglobin-induced oxidative damage [45]. It was recently shown that breast cancer CD163+ TAMs correlate with Wnt5a expression, the latter factor being responsible for macrophage reprogramming to an anti-inflammatory M2 status. The same group has reported that Wnt5a acts as a feedback antagonist of toll-like receptor (TLR) signaling, inducing IL-10 secretion [26]. Our results fit this mechanism well, as MDA-MB231 CM induced CD163 expression, a feature of M2c TAMs. This could indicate a parallel increase in Wnt5a that inhibits TLR response and increases IL-10 secretion upon LPS stimulation (Fig. 3c, f, i).
As previously discussed, the M2c-boosted differentiation by MDA-MB231-secreted products may have consequences in terms of microenvironment-aided tumor progression via immunosuppressive, matrix remodeling and scavenging TAM functions. These effects may impair an effective immune tumor rejection as our in vitro findings with murine macrophages and breast cancer cell line CM indicate [46].
The overall decrease of CD86 expression in M2a macrophages by breast cancer CM may contribute to immunosuppressive, tumor-promoting behavior. CD86, also known as B7-2, is a type I transmembrane protein of the immunoglobulin superfamily. It is a co-stimulatory molecule expressed by antigen-presenting cells such as dendritic cells and macrophages. Its binding to CD28 on naïve T-cells is essential for Th2 differentiation, cytokine secretion and induction of effector function [47].
In our system, M2a macrophages differentiated in the presence of IL-4 and MDA-MB231 CM had the potential for increased CD200R signaling which in vivo would indicate an immunosuppressive tumor-promoting environment. CD200R is a myeloid receptor expressed on macrophages, granulocytes, dendritic cells and NK (natural killer) cells [48]. CD200R signaling is known to increase the immune activation threshold, being physiologically relevant in restraining inflammation [48]. CD200 ligand interaction with its receptor CD200R on macrophages decreases TNF-α and IFN-γ secretion [49]. CD200 is expressed by cancer cells and other cell types like mesenchymal stem cells, thymocytes, activated T cells, B cells and dendritic cells. Studies in different tumor types, including breast cancer, showed that CD200-CD200R interaction delivers an immunosuppressive signal. This signal directly decreases inflammatory cytokine secretion by macrophages, and indirectly increases regulatory T cells (Treg) and decreases effector T-cell numbers, thereby promoting tumor progression by immune evasion [50].
Limitations of the study
In the TMA analysis the median of positive cells for each marker in all samples was used as a cutoff value and analysis of normal breast tissue - probably carrying resting macrophages as a healthy baseline control - could not be included. However, our study brought up differences in TAM activation status between patients relevant to the disease outcome. Larger studies are thus justified to ascertain the exact role of M2 macrophages in disease progression.
In the ex vivo macrophage differentiation studies, the extrapolation of the MDA-MB231 CM effects on macrophage differentiation to the clinical situation of triple-negative breast cancer patients should be made with care. MDA-MB231 is an aggressive model cell line, relevant in the field as it is the parental cell line for several metastatic sub-clones widely used in experiments in vivo [51–53]. The MDA-MB231 cell line belongs to the mesenchymal-like subtype, while cancer cells from triple-negative breast tumors, which can be of seven different subtypes, have phenotypic diversity from epithelial to mesenchymal characters [54]. However, we think our study remains relevant as it shows that breast cancer cells, regardless of their hormone receptor status and epithelial/mesenchymal nature, secrete factors that educate macrophages toward M2 differentiation. The most aggressive one, MDA-MB231, did it most effectively. Further studies are needed to unveil the factors responsible for the effects seen. M-CSF appears to be a key factor in M2 TAM differentiation, as shown by others [6, 55], but as breast cancer cell lines (MCF-7 and T47D) that do not produce M-CSF also affected the M2 phenotype, inducing M2a differentiation, we think there are other relevant M2 skewing factors, which our work cannot address. The discovery of such factors is of utmost relevance, and calls for further studies.
Conclusions
This study combines several lines of evidence for the importance of TAM polarization status in breast cancer progression. For the first time, it is clear that CD163+ TAMs associate with other known prognostic factors like fast proliferation, poor differentiation and ER-negativity. CD163+ TAMs may be associated with a decrease in RFS according to the multivariate Cox model. The presented ex vivo results are to our knowledge the first demonstrating the modulation of macrophage differentiation solely by breast cancer cell-secreted factors, providing evidence for the mechanisms of breast cancer macrophage education behind clinical findings. Particularly, the mesenchymal-type cell line MDA-MB231 polarizes macrophages toward a mixed M2a/M2c status. It is therefore rational to venture that the screening of TAM activation in breast cancer patients could be useful in predicting patients with a high metastatic risk. The knowledge of TAM activation status may allow the therapeutic targeting of TAMs, once TAMs targeting/modulating agents pass clinical trials and become widely available. These include bisphosphonates [56]; M-CSF and M-CSFR inhibitors and targeting antibodies [57], NCT01316822, NCT01444404; anti-macrophage migration inhibitory factor, NCT01765790 and L-MTP-PE, NCT00631631. There is a scarcity of therapeutic options for patients with triple-negative metastatic breast cancer, and growing resistance to the available options biased by a continuous focus on cancer cell targets, which are by nature genetically unstable and prone to mutations. Approaches such as ours fuel a necessary paradigm change, contributing to the notion that the immunological tumor microenvironment should be taken into account in the development of new multi-target cancer therapies.
Acknowledgements
The current research was funded by the Seventh Framework Programme [FP7/2007-2013] under grant agreement no.264817 – BONE-NET and by the Academy of Finland, decision numbers 132389 and 250917.
Abbreviations
- ATCC
American Type Culture Collection
- bFGF
basic fibroblast growth factor
- BSA
bovine serum albumin
- CM
conditioned media
- CTC
circulating tumor cell
- CTLs
cytotoxic T-lymphocytes
- CTR
control
- DAB
3,3’-Diaminobenzidine
- DCIS
ductal carcinoma in situ
- DTC
disseminating tumor cell
- EGF
epidermal growth factor
- EGFR
epidermal growth factor receptor
- ELISA
enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay
- EMT
epithelial to mesenchymal transition
- ER
estrogen receptor
- FBS
fetal bovine serum
- GM-CSF
granulocyte monocyte colony stimulating factor
- HER-2
human epidermal growth factor receptor 2
- HGFR
hepatocyte growth factor receptor
- IFN-γ
interferon γ
- kDa
kiloDaltons
- LIF
leukemia inhibitory factor
- LPS
lipopolysaccharide
- M-CSF
monocyte colony stimulating factor
- M-CSFR
monocyte colony stimulating factor receptor
- MDCs
myeloid-derived cells
- MDSCs
myeloid-derived suppressor cells
- MedFI
median fluorescence intensity
- MMP-9
matrix metalloproteinase 9
- MMPs
matrix metalloproteinases
- NK
natural killer
- OSMR
oncostatin M receptor
- PBMCs
peripheral blood mononuclear cells
- PBS
phosphate-buffered saline
- PR
progesterone receptor
- RET
proto-oncogene, which encodes for a receptor tyrosine kinase for members of the glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor
- RFS
recurrence-free survival
- RNS
reactive nitrogen species
- ROS
reactive oxygen species
- TAMs
tumor-associated macrophages
- TGFR2
transforming growth factor receptor 2
- TGF-β
transforming growth factor β
- TLR
toll-like receptor
- TMA
tissue microarray
- TNF-α
tumor necrosis factor α
- Treg
regulatory T-cells
- VCAM1
vascular cell adhesion molecule 1
- VEGF-A
vascular endothelial growth factor A
Additional files
Footnotes
Competing interests
The authors declare that they have no competing interests.
Authors’ contributions
SS conceived and designed the study, developed the methodology, acquired, analyzed and interpreted the data and wrote and revised the manuscript. RB acquired the flow cytometry data. ML, PK and JS provided technical support in the TMA analysis. SL and OT participated in the TMA study and performed its statistical analysis. HJ participated in the TMA study, acquiring, analyzing, and interpreting the data. DH participated in the study conception and design particularly in supervising the ex vivo macrophage differentiation studies. JuM supervised and coordinated the study. JM conceived, designed, supervised and participated in the manuscript writing and revision. All authors read, revised critically for important intellectual content and approved the final manuscript.
Contributor Information
Sofia Sousa, Phone: +358(0)503164101, Email: sofia.sousa@uef.fi.
Régis Brion, Email: regis.brion@univ-nantes.fr.
Minnamaija Lintunen, Email: minnamaija.lintunen@utu.fi.
Pauliina Kronqvist, Email: paukro@utu.fi.
Jouko Sandholm, Email: jouko.sandholm@btk.fi.
Jukka Mönkkönen, Email: jukka.monkkonen@uef.fi.
Pirkko-Liisa Kellokumpu-Lehtinen, Email: pirkko-liisa.kellokumpu-lehtinen@uta.fi.
Susanna Lauttia, Email: susanna.lauttia@helsinki.fi.
Olli Tynninen, Email: olli.tynninen@hus.fi.
Heikki Joensuu, Email: heikki.joensuu@hus.fi.
Dominique Heymann, Email: dominique.heymann@univ-nantes.fr.
Jorma A. Määttä, Email: jorma.maatta@utu.fi
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