amphiregulin

Amphiregulin (AREG)

  • Protein type: Transmembrane, EGF-like growth factor
  • Gene: AREG (Chromosome 4q13.3)
  • Activation: Cleaved by metalloproteases (e.g., ADAM17) to release soluble form
  • Receptor binding: Binds EGFR (ErbB1/HER1)
  • Promotes cell proliferation, survival, and migration
  • Involved in organ development (lung, mammary gland)
  • Key role in wound healing and epithelial regeneration
  • Modulates immune responses and inflammation

AREG is frequently upregulated in various cancers and is associated with:

1)

  • Title: Radiation-induced amphiregulin drives tumour metastasis
  • Main result: Radiotherapy induces AREG expression in tumor cells, which activates EGFR on myeloid cells → immunosuppression and reduced phagocytosis, facilitating distant metastasis.
  • Therapeutic implication: Combining radiotherapy with AREG/EGFR inhibitor may improve metastatic control.

Radiotherapy (RT) is a key modality in cancer treatment, traditionally associated with local tumor control and systemic immune activation (e.g., the abscopal effect). However, the pro-metastatic potential of RT is underexplored.

This study identifies amphiregulin (AREG) as a critical factor induced by RT that promotes distant metastasis by reprogramming EGFR-positive myeloid cells into an immunosuppressive phenotype.

  • RT induces expression of AREG in tumor cells.
  • AREG acts on EGFR-expressing myeloid cells, inhibiting phagocytosis.
  • This reprogramming suppresses immune surveillance and supports distant metastatic outgrowth.
  • Inhibition of AREG or EGFR reduces metastasis in preclinical models.
  • Mechanistic insight: RT ➝ AREG ➝ EGFR+ myeloid cells ➝ immunosuppression ➝ metastasis.
  • Multimodal design: Combines in vitro, in vivo, and clinical observations.
  • Translational relevance: Suggests therapeutic potential of AREG or EGFR blockade post-RT.
  • Paradigm shift: Challenges the assumption that RT is solely antitumoral.
  • Tumor heterogeneity not addressed: Unclear whether the mechanism is universal across tumor types.
  • Simplified immunological view: Focuses on myeloid cells; limited analysis of T-cell responses.
  • Lacks clinical trial data: Proposes interventions not yet validated in humans.
  • Short-term perspective: No data on long-term effects of AREG inhibition (e.g., on wound healing).
  • Potential oversimplification: Other radiation-induced cytokines may also contribute to metastasis.
  • Reframes RT as a double-edged sword: antitumoral locally, potentially protumoral systemically.
  • Encourages exploration of RT + anti-EGFR/anti-AREG combinations.
  • Reinforces the importance of immune monitoring during radiotherapy.

This study presents robust evidence that RT can promote metastasis via radiation-induced AREG, which suppresses innate immunity. It introduces a compelling mechanism with therapeutic and conceptual implications, though further clinical validation is needed.


1)
Piffkó A, Yang K, Panda A, Heide J, Tesak K, Wen C, Zawieracz K, Wang L, Naccasha EZ, Bugno J, Fu Y, Chen D, Donle L, Lengyel E, Tilley DG, Mack M, Rock RS, Chmura SJ, Vokes EE, He C, Pitroda SP, Liang HL, Weichselbaum RR. Radiation-induced amphiregulin drives tumour metastasis. Nature. 2025 May 14. doi: 10.1038/s41586-025-08994-0. Epub ahead of print. PMID: 40369065.
  • amphiregulin.txt
  • Last modified: 2025/05/15 07:33
  • by administrador