AI Article Synopsis

  • The study focused on understanding the tumor microenvironment (TME) of brain metastases (BM) from lung cancer, specifically looking at factors like hypoxia and redox state, which impact tumor growth and treatment resistance.
  • In vitro experiments showed that lung cancer cells increased certain proteins in response to low oxygen levels (hypoxia), indicating metabolic and oxidative stress changes in the tumor tissue.
  • Imaging techniques, particularly [Cu][Cu(ATSM)] PET, revealed significant differences in hypoxia levels and protein expressions between cortical and striatal brain metastases, highlighting the importance of this imaging method in tailoring treatment approaches based on tumor characteristics.

Article Abstract

Background: Brain metastases (BM) are the most frequent malignant brain tumors. The aim of this study was to characterize the tumor microenvironment (TME) of BM and particularly hypoxia and redox state, known to play a role in tumor growth and treatment resistance with multimodal PET and MRI imaging, immunohistochemical and proteomic approaches in a human lung cancer (H2030-BrM3)-derived BM model in rats.

Results: First, in vitro studies confirmed that H2030-BrM3 cells respond to hypoxia with increasing expression of HIF-1, HIF-2 and their target genes. Proteomic analyses revealed, among expression changes, proteins associated with metabolism, oxidative stress, metal response and hypoxia signaling in particular in cortical BM. [Cu][Cu(ATSM)] PET revealed a significant uptake by cortical BM (p < 0.01), while no uptake is observed in striatal BM 23 days after tumor implantation. Pimonidazole, HIF-1α, HIF-2α, CA-IX as well as GFAP, CTR1 and DMT1 immunostainings are positive in both BM.

Conclusion: Overall, [Cu][Cu(ATSM)] imaging and proteomic results showed the presence of hypoxia and protein expression changes linked to hypoxia and oxidative stress in BM, which are more pronounced in cortical BM compared to striatal BM. Moreover, it emphasized the interest of [Cu][Cu(ATSM)] PET to characterize TME of BM and depict inter-metastasis heterogeneity that could be useful to guide treatments.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10676347PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13550-023-01052-8DOI Listing

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