Author
Listed:
- Hisayuki Yao
(Duke University
The National Hospital Organization Hiroshima-Nishi Medical Center)
- Trevor T. Price
(Duke University)
- Gaia Cantelli
(Duke University)
- Brandon Ngo
(Duke University)
- Matthew J. Warner
(Duke University
Vitrisa Therapeutics, Inc.)
- Lindsey Olivere
(Duke University)
- Sarah M. Ridge
(Duke University)
- Elizabeth M. Jablonski
(University of Chicago
Northwestern University)
- Joseph Therrien
(Gilead Sciences, Inc.)
- Stacey Tannheimer
(Gilead Sciences, Inc.)
- Chad M. McCall
(Duke University)
- Anjen Chenn
(LabCorp)
- Dorothy A. Sipkins
(Duke University)
Abstract
Acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) has a marked propensity to metastasize to the central nervous system (CNS). In contrast to brain metastases from solid tumours, metastases of ALL seldom involve the parenchyma but are isolated to the leptomeninges, which is an infrequent site for carcinomatous invasion. Although metastasis to the CNS occurs across all subtypes of ALL, a unifying mechanism for invasion has not yet been determined. Here we show that ALL cells in the circulation are unable to breach the blood–brain barrier in mice; instead, they migrate into the CNS along vessels that pass directly between vertebral or calvarial bone marrow and the subarachnoid space. The basement membrane of these bridging vessels is enriched in laminin, which is known to coordinate pathfinding of neuronal progenitor cells in the CNS. The laminin receptor α6 integrin is expressed in most cases of ALL. We found that α6 integrin–laminin interactions mediated the migration of ALL cells towards the cerebrospinal fluid in vitro. Mice with ALL xenografts were treated with either a PI3Kδ inhibitor, which decreased α6 integrin expression on ALL cells, or specific α6 integrin-neutralizing antibodies and showed significant reductions in ALL transit along bridging vessels, blast counts in the cerebrospinal fluid and CNS disease symptoms despite minimally decreased bone marrow disease burden. Our data suggest that α6 integrin expression, which is common in ALL, allows cells to use neural migratory pathways to invade the CNS.
Suggested Citation
Hisayuki Yao & Trevor T. Price & Gaia Cantelli & Brandon Ngo & Matthew J. Warner & Lindsey Olivere & Sarah M. Ridge & Elizabeth M. Jablonski & Joseph Therrien & Stacey Tannheimer & Chad M. McCall & An, 2018.
"Leukaemia hijacks a neural mechanism to invade the central nervous system,"
Nature, Nature, vol. 560(7716), pages 55-60, August.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:nature:v:560:y:2018:i:7716:d:10.1038_s41586-018-0342-5
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-018-0342-5
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