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Título
Tumour endothelial cell reprogramming orchestrates angiocrine signalling to drive chemoresistance in breast cancer
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Angiocrine
Chemoresistance
Breast cancer
NF-κB
Doxorubicin
Clasificación UNESCO
2490 Neurociencias
Fecha de publicación
2026-06-22
Editor
Springer
Citación
Gomez-Escudero, J., Maniati, E., Holdsworth, J., Beattie, G., Hijazi, M., Guelbert, M., Elorbany, S., Cutillas, P., Wang, J., Hodivala-Dilke, K., y D’Amico, G. (2026). Tumour endothelial cell reprogramming orchestrates angiocrine signalling to drive chemoresistance in breast cancer. Angiogenesis, 29(3), 48. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10456-026-10063-7
Resumen
[EN]Despite its established role in breast cancer treatment, Doxorubicin treatment remains subject to adaptive resistance
mechanisms that extend beyond cancer cell intrinsic alterations ultimately reducing therapy efficacy. Our study in a
MMTV-PyMT-driven mouse breast cancer model reveals that prolonged Doxorubicin (Dox) exposure triggers significant
reprogramming of the tumour vasculature, substantially altering the angiocrine landscape and shaping treatment outcomes.
Notably, tumours that initially respond, but later revert, display an endothelial cell subclustering with activation of proliferative and NF-κB-dependent cytokine pathways. We further identify a novel endothelial subpopulation characterised
by higher expression of drug clearance and oxidative metabolism markers, suggesting an active role in mitigating Dox
efficacy and angiogenesis promotion. These findings substantiate endothelial plasticity as a critical mediator of therapeutic
failure. By uncovering these vascular adaptations, our work provides a new perspective on the underlying mechanisms of
Dox resistance and the prolonged efficacy of chemotherapy in breast cancer.
URI
DOI
10.1007/s10456-026-10063-7
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