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Publication : Lipid Osteoclastokines Regulate Breast Cancer Bone Metastasis.

First Author  Krzeszinski JY Year  2017
Journal  Endocrinology Volume  158
Issue  3 Pages  477-489
PubMed ID  27967239 Mgi Jnum  J:247939
Mgi Id  MGI:5919145 Doi  10.1210/en.2016-1570
Citation  Krzeszinski JY, et al. (2017) Lipid Osteoclastokines Regulate Breast Cancer Bone Metastasis. Endocrinology 158(3):477-489
abstractText  Bone metastasis is a deadly consequence of cancers, in which osteoclast forms a vicious cycle with tumor cells. Bone metastasis attenuation by clinical usage of osteoclast inhibitors and in our osteopetrotic mouse genetic models with beta-catenin constitutive activation or peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma deficiency fully support the important role of osteoclast in driving the bone metastatic niche. However, the mechanisms for this "partnership in crime" are underexplored. Here we show that osteoclasts reprogram their lipid secretion to support cancer cells. Metabolomic profiling reveals elevated prometastatic arachidonic acid (AA) but reduced antimetastatic lysophosphatidylcholines (LPCs). This shift in lipid osteoclastokines synergistically stimulates tumor cell proliferation, migration, survival, and expression of prometastatic genes. Pharmacologically, combined treatment with LPCs and BW-755C, an inhibitor of AA signaling via blocking lipoxygenase and cyclooxygenase, impedes breast cancer bone metastasis. Our findings elucidate key paracrine mechanisms for the osteoclast-cancer vicious cycle and uncover important therapeutic targets for bone metastasis.
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