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Volume 3
September 17-18, 2018 Tokyo Japan
Joint Event on
33
rd
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Oncology Nursing and Cancer Care
Journal of Nursing & Patient Care
Cancer Nursing & Pathology Congress 2018
September 17-18, 2018
16
th
Asia Pacific Pathology Congress
Yu-Chun Lin, J Clin Exp Pathol 2018, Volume 8
DOI: 10.4172/2161-0681-C4-055
Cancer-associated fibroblast induced chemokine (C-Cmotif) ligand 11 contribute to the progression
of head and neck cancer
Yu-Chun Lin
National Defense Medical Center, Taiwan
H
ead and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) is one of the leading causes of cancer-related death in Taiwan and
worldwide. The prognosis of HNSCC is usually poor because of its propensity of extensive invasion, local recurrence and
frequent regional lymph node metastasis, even at initial diagnosis. Recent studies showed carcinoma-associated fibroblasts
(CAFs), a major type of tumor-surrounding stromal cell, generate certain mediators through which CAFs interact with tumors
and contribute to cancer progression in numerous cancers. In the present study, we used organotypic culture to investigate CAFs
that promote aggressive behavior of cancer cells. Using microarray analysis, we detected abundant expression of chemokine
(C-C motif) ligand 11(CCL11) in CAFs and identify CCL11as a critical mediator in CAFs-induced invasiveness. We validated
that CCL11 played a major role in the crosstalk between fibroblasts and HNSCC cells via the paracrine manner. CCL11was
found upregulated in CAFs than in normal fibroblasts via Western blot analysis. HNSCC cells treated with recombinant CCL11
increased capabilities of sphere formation, promoted migration and invasion abilities through induction of the epithelial-
to-mesenchymal transdifferentiation with corresponding morphological alterations of cancer cells. Counteracting CCL11
activity diminished the aggressive phenotype of cancer cells induced by CAFs. We further studied the relationship between the
expression of CCL11 in both CAFs and HNSCC cells and clinical outcome in the patients with HNSCC. These results indicate
that CAFs promote cancer invasiveness via a paracrine effect on microenvironmental CCL11 signaling and suggest that CCL11
is a potential prognostic biomarker that could be considered in therapeutic strategies for the treatment of patients with HNSCC.
Biography
Yu-Chun Lin has completed his MD at the age of 25 years from National Defense Medical Center, Taipei, Taiwan. He received anatomic pathlogly training
at Tri-service General Hospital from 2007-2010 and served as anatomic pathology physician at Pathology department of Tri-service General Hosptial since
2012.
yuchunlin.md@hotmail.com