Disruption of Circadian Clock Induces Abnormal Mammary Morphology and Aggressive Basal Tumorigenesis by Enhancing LILRB4 Signaling.
Olajumoke OgunlusiMrinmoy SarkarArhit ChakrabartiDevon J BolandTristan NguyenJames SampsonChristian NguyenDanielle FailsYava L Jones-HallLoning FuBani MallickAlex C KeeneJeff R JonesTapasree Roy SarkarPublished in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2024)
Epidemiological studies have shown that circadian rhythm disruption (CRD) is associated with the risk of breast cancer. However, the role of CRD in mammary gland morphology and aggressive basal mammary tumorigenesis and the molecular mechanisms underlying CRD and cancer risk remain unknown. To investigate the effect of CRD on aggressive tumorigenesis, a genetically engineered mouse model that recapitulates the human basal type of breast cancer was used for this study. The effect of CRD on mammary gland morphology was investigated using wild-type mice model. The impact of CRD on the tumor microenvironment was investigated using the tumors from LD12:12 and CRD mice via scRNA seq. ScRNA seq was substantiated by multiplexing immunostaining, flow cytometry, and realtime PCR. The effect of LILRB4 immunotherapy on CRD-induced tumorigenesis was also investigated. Here we identified the impact of CRD on basal tumorigenesis and mammary gland morphology and identified the role of LILRB4 on CRD-induced lung metastasis. We found that chronic CRD disrupted mouse mammary gland morphology and increased tumor burden, and lung metastasis and induced an immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment by enhancing LILRB4a expression. Moreover, CRD increased the M2-macrophage and regulatory T-cell populations but decreased the M1-macrophage populations. Furthermore, targeted immunotherapy against LILRB4 reduced CRD-induced immunosuppressive microenvironment and lung metastasis. These findings identify and implicate LILRB4a as a link between CRD and aggressive mammary tumorigenesis. This study also establishes the potential role of the targeted LILRB4a immunotherapy as an inhibitor of CRD-induced lung metastasis.
Keyphrases
- high glucose
- diabetic rats
- mouse model
- wild type
- flow cytometry
- type diabetes
- gene expression
- atrial fibrillation
- oxidative stress
- adipose tissue
- single cell
- insulin resistance
- atomic force microscopy
- transcription factor
- heart rate
- climate change
- high fat diet induced
- risk factors
- binding protein
- resting state
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- case control
- functional connectivity
- childhood cancer