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  • Tumour-vasculature developm...
    Choi, Seo-Hyun; Kim, A-Ram; Nam, Jae-Kyung; Kim, Jin-Mo; Kim, Jee-Youn; Seo, Haeng Ran; Lee, Hae-June; Cho, Jaeho; Lee, Yoon-Jin

    Nature communications, 11/2018, Volume: 9, Issue: 1
    Journal Article

    It remains controversial whether targeting tumour vasculature can improve radiotherapeutic efficacy. We report that radiation-induced endothelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EndMT) leads to tumour vasculature with abnormal SMA NG2 pericyte recruitment during tumour regrowth after radiotherapy. Trp53 (but not Tgfbr2) deletion in endothelial cells (ECs) inhibited radiation-induced EndMT, reducing tumour regrowth and metastases with a high CD44v6 cancer-stem-cell (CSC) content after radiotherapy. Osteopontin, an EndMT-related angiocrine factor suppressed by EC-Trp53 deletion, stimulated proliferation in dormant CD44v6 cells in severely hypoxic regions after radiation. Radiation-induced EndMT significantly regulated tumour-associated macrophage (TAM) polarization. CXCR4 upregulation in radioresistant tumour ECs was highly associated with SDF-1 TAM recruitment and M2 polarization of TAMs, which was suppressed by Trp53 deletion. These EndMT-related phenomena were also observed in irradiated human lung cancer tissues. Our findings suggest that targeting tumour EndMT might enhance radiotherapy efficacy by inhibiting the re-activation of dormant hypoxic CSCs and promoting anti-tumour immune responses.