Leqian Ying, Yini Zhu, Lu Zhang, Min Ji, Meidan Wang, Lei Dong, Zhengcheng Yun, Yanping Chen, Jingyi Zhou, Chunchun Huang, Shengwei Zhang, Xuhong Yang, Hui Yang, Guichun Huang, Shukui Qin, Jinbing Xie, Lin Liu
{"title":"表达FSTL3的癌症相关成纤维细胞促进血管生成模拟形成并驱动结肠癌恶性肿瘤。","authors":"Leqian Ying, Yini Zhu, Lu Zhang, Min Ji, Meidan Wang, Lei Dong, Zhengcheng Yun, Yanping Chen, Jingyi Zhou, Chunchun Huang, Shengwei Zhang, Xuhong Yang, Hui Yang, Guichun Huang, Shukui Qin, Jinbing Xie, Lin Liu","doi":"10.1038/s41419-025-08009-w","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>Anti-angiogenic therapies are commonly employed in colon cancer management, yet many patients eventually develop resistance and experience disease progression. Vasculogenic mimicry (VM)-the formation of tumor-derived vessel-like networks-has been recognized as one mechanism contributing to this resistance, although the underlying details remain incompletely understood. Here, by integrating bioinformatic analyses of publicly available datasets and validating the results in patient samples (n = 157), we identified follistatin-like 3 (FSTL3) as a critical factor predominantly expressed in colon cancer-associated fibroblasts (CCAFs), with its expression strongly correlating with increased VM formation, intratumoral blood vessels, and poor prognosis. Single-cell RNA sequencing of tumors from VM and non-VM patients revealed that hypoxia drives FSTL3 expression in CCAFs, leading to extracellular matrix remodeling and enhancing cancer cell endothelial-like plasticity. Mechanistically, FSTL3 binds to transferrin receptor (TfR1), an iron-uptake receptor on cancer cells, thereby activating the TfR1/AKT/mTOR pathway and elevating VE-Cadherin to support endothelial-like transformation, VM, and metastatic progression. Notably, FSTL3-targeting antibodies (aFSTL3) effectively inhibited VM and angiogenesis in both in vitro and in vivo models, while the combination of aFSTL3 with bevacizumab produced synergistic suppression of neovascular-like structures and distant metastases. These findings demonstrate a pivotal role for FSTL3+ CCAFs in facilitating VM through TfR1-mediated signaling and offer a promising dual-target approach to overcome anti-angiogenic therapy resistance in colon cancer.</p>","PeriodicalId":9734,"journal":{"name":"Cell Death & Disease","volume":"16 1","pages":"706"},"PeriodicalIF":9.6000,"publicationDate":"2025-10-06","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12501291/pdf/","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Cancer-associated fibroblasts expressing FSTL3 promote vasculogenic mimicry formation and drive colon cancer malignancy.\",\"authors\":\"Leqian Ying, Yini Zhu, Lu Zhang, Min Ji, Meidan Wang, Lei Dong, Zhengcheng Yun, Yanping Chen, Jingyi Zhou, Chunchun Huang, Shengwei Zhang, Xuhong Yang, Hui Yang, Guichun Huang, Shukui Qin, Jinbing Xie, Lin Liu\",\"doi\":\"10.1038/s41419-025-08009-w\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p>Anti-angiogenic therapies are commonly employed in colon cancer management, yet many patients eventually develop resistance and experience disease progression. Vasculogenic mimicry (VM)-the formation of tumor-derived vessel-like networks-has been recognized as one mechanism contributing to this resistance, although the underlying details remain incompletely understood. Here, by integrating bioinformatic analyses of publicly available datasets and validating the results in patient samples (n = 157), we identified follistatin-like 3 (FSTL3) as a critical factor predominantly expressed in colon cancer-associated fibroblasts (CCAFs), with its expression strongly correlating with increased VM formation, intratumoral blood vessels, and poor prognosis. Single-cell RNA sequencing of tumors from VM and non-VM patients revealed that hypoxia drives FSTL3 expression in CCAFs, leading to extracellular matrix remodeling and enhancing cancer cell endothelial-like plasticity. Mechanistically, FSTL3 binds to transferrin receptor (TfR1), an iron-uptake receptor on cancer cells, thereby activating the TfR1/AKT/mTOR pathway and elevating VE-Cadherin to support endothelial-like transformation, VM, and metastatic progression. Notably, FSTL3-targeting antibodies (aFSTL3) effectively inhibited VM and angiogenesis in both in vitro and in vivo models, while the combination of aFSTL3 with bevacizumab produced synergistic suppression of neovascular-like structures and distant metastases. 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Cancer-associated fibroblasts expressing FSTL3 promote vasculogenic mimicry formation and drive colon cancer malignancy.
Anti-angiogenic therapies are commonly employed in colon cancer management, yet many patients eventually develop resistance and experience disease progression. Vasculogenic mimicry (VM)-the formation of tumor-derived vessel-like networks-has been recognized as one mechanism contributing to this resistance, although the underlying details remain incompletely understood. Here, by integrating bioinformatic analyses of publicly available datasets and validating the results in patient samples (n = 157), we identified follistatin-like 3 (FSTL3) as a critical factor predominantly expressed in colon cancer-associated fibroblasts (CCAFs), with its expression strongly correlating with increased VM formation, intratumoral blood vessels, and poor prognosis. Single-cell RNA sequencing of tumors from VM and non-VM patients revealed that hypoxia drives FSTL3 expression in CCAFs, leading to extracellular matrix remodeling and enhancing cancer cell endothelial-like plasticity. Mechanistically, FSTL3 binds to transferrin receptor (TfR1), an iron-uptake receptor on cancer cells, thereby activating the TfR1/AKT/mTOR pathway and elevating VE-Cadherin to support endothelial-like transformation, VM, and metastatic progression. Notably, FSTL3-targeting antibodies (aFSTL3) effectively inhibited VM and angiogenesis in both in vitro and in vivo models, while the combination of aFSTL3 with bevacizumab produced synergistic suppression of neovascular-like structures and distant metastases. These findings demonstrate a pivotal role for FSTL3+ CCAFs in facilitating VM through TfR1-mediated signaling and offer a promising dual-target approach to overcome anti-angiogenic therapy resistance in colon cancer.
期刊介绍:
Brought to readers by the editorial team of Cell Death & Differentiation, Cell Death & Disease is an online peer-reviewed journal specializing in translational cell death research. It covers a wide range of topics in experimental and internal medicine, including cancer, immunity, neuroscience, and now cancer metabolism.
Cell Death & Disease seeks to encompass the breadth of translational implications of cell death, and topics of particular concentration will include, but are not limited to, the following:
Experimental medicine
Cancer
Immunity
Internal medicine
Neuroscience
Cancer metabolism