ROLE OF SCHWANN CELLS-CANCER CELLS CROSSTALK IN TUMOUR PROGRESSION

In the last years, relevant studies have shown that the peripheral nervous system is actively involved in the progression of cancer and some works have demonstrated the role of Schwann cells (SCs) in affecting cancer progression.1,2 Our results (obtained on melanoma and hepatocarcinoma cells expose...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PAGEPress Publications 2025-08-01
Series:European Journal of Histochemistry
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.ejh.it/ejh/article/view/4276
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849227377518837760
collection DOAJ
description In the last years, relevant studies have shown that the peripheral nervous system is actively involved in the progression of cancer and some works have demonstrated the role of Schwann cells (SCs) in affecting cancer progression.1,2 Our results (obtained on melanoma and hepatocarcinoma cells exposed to the conditioned medium of human SCs cultures) reveal that SCs may induce more aggressive features on tumour cell lines, including enhanced proliferation, migration, Matrigel invasion, changes in the protein levels of epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition markers (N-cadherin, E-cadherin, Vimentin), upregulation of key oncogenes and downregulation of tumour suppressors. Concurrently, paracrine signals from cancer cells may induce a chemotactic response in SCs, promoting processes such as proliferation, migration, Matrigel invasion and upregulation of repair-related markers (GFAP), thereby activating a programme resembling the one occurring at nerve injury sites. Our findings demonstrate a bidirectional interaction between SCs and cancer cells. This emphasizes the importance of developing a deeper understanding of the glial component in the tumour microenvironment, as this could significantly impact tumour progression. Human Cell cultures of melanoma (SK-MEL-28, A375), hepatocarcinoma (HepG2, Hep3B), primary SCs. Proliferation assays (cell counting, MTT, BrdU, clonogenic tests), migration/ invasion assays, WB and MS-based proteomic analyses.
format Article
id doaj-art-96978884b94d460c98b6e218f4fe9cb4
institution Kabale University
issn 1121-760X
2038-8306
language English
publishDate 2025-08-01
publisher PAGEPress Publications
record_format Article
series European Journal of Histochemistry
spelling doaj-art-96978884b94d460c98b6e218f4fe9cb42025-08-23T11:19:55ZengPAGEPress PublicationsEuropean Journal of Histochemistry1121-760X2038-83062025-08-0169s210.4081/ejh.2025.4276ROLE OF SCHWANN CELLS-CANCER CELLS CROSSTALK IN TUMOUR PROGRESSION In the last years, relevant studies have shown that the peripheral nervous system is actively involved in the progression of cancer and some works have demonstrated the role of Schwann cells (SCs) in affecting cancer progression.1,2 Our results (obtained on melanoma and hepatocarcinoma cells exposed to the conditioned medium of human SCs cultures) reveal that SCs may induce more aggressive features on tumour cell lines, including enhanced proliferation, migration, Matrigel invasion, changes in the protein levels of epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition markers (N-cadherin, E-cadherin, Vimentin), upregulation of key oncogenes and downregulation of tumour suppressors. Concurrently, paracrine signals from cancer cells may induce a chemotactic response in SCs, promoting processes such as proliferation, migration, Matrigel invasion and upregulation of repair-related markers (GFAP), thereby activating a programme resembling the one occurring at nerve injury sites. Our findings demonstrate a bidirectional interaction between SCs and cancer cells. This emphasizes the importance of developing a deeper understanding of the glial component in the tumour microenvironment, as this could significantly impact tumour progression. Human Cell cultures of melanoma (SK-MEL-28, A375), hepatocarcinoma (HepG2, Hep3B), primary SCs. Proliferation assays (cell counting, MTT, BrdU, clonogenic tests), migration/ invasion assays, WB and MS-based proteomic analyses. https://www.ejh.it/ejh/article/view/4276FROM HISTOCHEMISTRY AND HISTOPATHOLOGY TO CLINICAL TRANSLATION
spellingShingle ROLE OF SCHWANN CELLS-CANCER CELLS CROSSTALK IN TUMOUR PROGRESSION
European Journal of Histochemistry
FROM HISTOCHEMISTRY AND HISTOPATHOLOGY TO CLINICAL TRANSLATION
title ROLE OF SCHWANN CELLS-CANCER CELLS CROSSTALK IN TUMOUR PROGRESSION
title_full ROLE OF SCHWANN CELLS-CANCER CELLS CROSSTALK IN TUMOUR PROGRESSION
title_fullStr ROLE OF SCHWANN CELLS-CANCER CELLS CROSSTALK IN TUMOUR PROGRESSION
title_full_unstemmed ROLE OF SCHWANN CELLS-CANCER CELLS CROSSTALK IN TUMOUR PROGRESSION
title_short ROLE OF SCHWANN CELLS-CANCER CELLS CROSSTALK IN TUMOUR PROGRESSION
title_sort role of schwann cells cancer cells crosstalk in tumour progression
topic FROM HISTOCHEMISTRY AND HISTOPATHOLOGY TO CLINICAL TRANSLATION
url https://www.ejh.it/ejh/article/view/4276