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Disabled Homolog 2 Controls Prometastatic Activity of Tumor-Associated Macrophages.

Ilaria MarigoRosalinda TrovatoFrancesca HoferVincenzo IngangiGiacomo DesantisKevin LeoneFrancesco De SanctisStefano UgelStefania CanèAnna SimonelliAlessia LamolinaraManuela IezziAngelo Paolo Dei TosMassimo RuggeFederico BoschiGiulia BorileThomas M EisenhaureSiranush SarkizovaDavid LiebNir HacohenLuca AzzolinStefano PiccoloRita Teresa LawlorAldo ScarpaLuisa CarbogninEmilio BriaSilvio BicciatoPeter J MurrayVincenzo Bronte
Published in: Cancer discovery (2020)
Tumor-associated macrophages (TAM) are regulators of extracellular matrix (ECM) remodeling and metastatic progression, the main cause of cancer-associated death. We found that disabled homolog 2 mitogen-responsive phosphoprotein (DAB2) is highly expressed in tumor-infiltrating TAMs and that its genetic ablation significantly impairs lung metastasis formation. DAB2-expressing TAMs, mainly localized along the tumor-invasive front, participate in integrin recycling, ECM remodeling, and directional migration in a tridimensional matrix. DAB2+ macrophages escort the invasive dissemination of cancer cells by a mechanosensing pathway requiring the transcription factor YAP. In human lobular breast and gastric carcinomas, DAB2+ TAMs correlated with a poor clinical outcome, identifying DAB2 as potential prognostic biomarker for stratification of patients with cancer. DAB2 is therefore central for the prometastatic activity of TAMs. SIGNIFICANCE: DAB2 expression in macrophages is essential for metastasis formation but not primary tumor growth. Mechanosensing cues, activating the complex YAP-TAZ, regulate DAB2 in macrophages, which in turn controls integrin recycling and ECM remodeling in 3-D tissue matrix. The presence of DAB2+ TAMs in patients with cancer correlates with worse prognosis.This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 1611.
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