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Active NON-SBIR/STTR RPGS NIH (US)

PDGF-BB and the metastatic brain microenvironment

$4.87M USD

Funder NATIONAL CANCER INSTITUTE
Recipient Organization Ohio State University
Country United States
Start Date Aug 11, 2023
End Date Jul 31, 2028
Duration 1,816 days
Number of Grantees 1
Roles Principal Investigator
Data Source NIH (US)
Grant ID 10718597
Grant Description

PROJECT SUMMARY Recent studies by my group have highlighted the clinical relevance of platelet-derived growth factor-B (PDGFB) secreted by malignant breast epithelial cells and its receptor, platelet-derived growth factor receptor beta (PDGFRβ), expressed on cells of the mesenchymal lineage (e.g., fibroblasts, pericytes, astrocytes) in the

promotion of breast cancer metastasis to the brain (BCBM). Our studies revealed: (1) PDGFB ligand promotes primary and intracranial breast tumor growth, (2) mesenchymal-specific PDGFRβ hyperactivity (Fsp1- cre;PdgfrbD849V/+) promotes BCBM in mice, (3) PDGFB ligand expression in the primary breast tumor is

prognostic of brain metastases in human breast cancer patients, and (4) inhibition with a small molecule selective PDGFR inhibitor (crenolanib) reduces intracranial tumor growth in mouse models of BCBM. This published work discovered PDGFB-to-PDGFRβ signaling as a clinically relevant signaling node for predicting,

and potentially treating, BCBM. Our continued investigation into how breast cancer-derived PDGFB mechanistically modulates the brain TME has further revealed previously unknown immuno-modulatory and vascular effects. The current application will directly test the overarching hypothesis that breast cancer cells

expressing PDGFB completely transform the brain metastatic niche, both by creating a pro-tumorigenic immune microenvironment and by invoking vascular changes. In Aim 1, the interaction between breast cancer cells with/without PDGFB and the brain immune microenvironment will be evaluated in vitro (microglial co-

cultures and conditioned media experiments) and in vivo (intracardiac injections followed by brain histopathological evaluation and high-plex spectral cytometry). This aim will also evaluate if PDGFB causes changes in the microglial phagocytic response as well as shifts in anti-tumorigenic/pro-tumorigenic myeloid cell

phenotypes. These studies will be the first to directly test whether breast cancer-derived PDGFB drives immune evasion in the brain metastatic microenvironment. In Aim 2, the interaction between breast cancer cells with/without PDGFB and the brain microvasculature will be evaluated in vitro (BBB spheroids,

microfluidics) and in vivo (intracardiac injections followed by brain histopathological evaluation). This aim will also evaluate a putative mechanism by which PDGFB functions in an autocrine manner to upregulate the pro- angiogenic factor Angiopoietin-1, and whether these vascular changes can be ablated with small molecule

inhibitors of PDGFRβ and/or Tie2 (angiopoietin receptor). These studies will be the first to directly test the hypothesis that breast cancer-derived PDGFB alters the brain microvasculature indirectly through an autocrine PDGFB-PDGFRβ-Ang1 axis. Upon completion of the proposed study, we will have determined potentially

targetable mechanism(s) by which PDGFB pre-conditions the brain microenvironment allowing for metastasis to this site.

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Ohio State University

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