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Query: EC:2.7.10.1 (
ERK
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95,504
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Inhibition of angiogenesis has become a major target in experimental cancer therapies. Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and its receptors are essential for breast cancer progression and relevant targets in experimental anti-angiogenesis. VEGF, produced by carcinoma cells, acts in a paracrine fashion on endothelial cells and displays autocrine activity on carcinoma cells. Breast cancer cells express VEGF-A, VEGF-B,
VEGF-C
and their receptors VEGFR-1 (Flt-1), VEGFR-2 (Flk-1/
KDR
) and neuropilin (NP-1/NP-2). VEGF-A triggers cellular signalling, an invasive phenotype of certain breast cancer cell lines and influences cell survival. However, such an autocrine VEGF/VEGFR signalling loop remains to be established. We demonstrate production of VEGF-A in cell lines MDA-MB-468, T47d, MCF-7, HBL-100 and in a primary breast cancer culture. Moreover, these cells showed baseline VEGFR-2 tyrosine-phosphorylation that could be enhanced by VEGF-A stimulation. In addition, VEGF-A leads to increased phosphorylation of ERK1/2 and Akt indicating that VEGF-A stimulation plays a crucial role in the regulation of cell growth, apoptosis, survival and differentiation. Moreover, we have established a novel breast cancer cell culture MW1 that expresses high levels of VEGF-A. We demonstrate that VEGFR-2 on the surface of breast cancer cells is functional and is capable of being stimulated by external VEGF-A. VEGF-A production by and VEGFR-2 activation on the surface of breast cancer cells indicates the presence of a distinct autocrine signalling loop that enables breast cancer cells to promote their own growth and survival by phosphorylation and activation of VEGFR-2. Moreover, this autocrine loop represents an attractive therapeutic target.
...
PMID:Autocrine vascular endothelial growth factor signalling in breast cancer. Evidence from cell lines and primary breast cancer cultures in vitro. 1632 60
The VEGF/VPF (vascular endothelial growth factor/vascular permeability factor) ligands and receptors are crucial regulators of vasculogenesis, angiogenesis, lymphangiogenesis and vascular permeability in vertebrates. VEGF-A, the prototype VEGF ligand, binds and activates two tyrosine kinase receptors:
VEGFR1
(Flt-1) and
VEGFR2
(
KDR
/Flk-1).
VEGFR1
, which occurs in transmembrane and soluble forms, negatively regulates vasculogenesis and angiogenesis during early embryogenesis, but it also acts as a positive regulator of angiogenesis and inflammatory responses, playing a role in several human diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis and cancer. The soluble
VEGFR1
is overexpressed in placenta in preeclampsia patients.
VEGFR2
has critical functions in physiological and pathological angiogenesis through distinct signal transduction pathways regulating proliferation and migration of endothelial cells.
VEGFR3
, a receptor for the lymphatic growth factors
VEGF-C
and VEGF-D, but not for VEGF-A, regulates vascular and lymphatic endothelial cell function during embryogenesis. Loss-of-function variants of
VEGFR3
have been identified in lymphedema. Formation of tumor lymphatics may be stimulated by tumor-produced
VEGF-C
, allowing increased spread of tumor metastases through the lymphatics. Mapping the signaling system of these important receptors may provide the knowledge necessary to suppress specific signaling pathways in major human diseases.
...
PMID:Signal transduction by VEGF receptors in regulation of angiogenesis and lymphangiogenesis. 1633 62
Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF, occurring in several isoforms: VEGF-A, -B, -C, -D) is a well-known endothelial cell mitogen and vascular growth and permeability factor. Recent work done over the last few years has elucidated the important role of VEGF, which participates in the regulation of normal (physiological or therapeutic) and pathological angiogenesis (VEGF-A, VEGF-B) and lymphangiogenesis (
VEGF-C
, VEGF-D). VEGF has also been implicated in practically every stage of angiogenesis, yet its role in the initiation of new blood vessel creation appears to be the most important. In addition to its role as a key angiogenic factor, VEGF also possesses neurotrophic and neuroprotective activity both in the peripheral and in the central nervous system, exerting a direct action on neurons, Schwann cells, astrocytes, neural stem cells, and microglia. VEGF interacts with three subtypes of VEGF receptors occurring on the cellular membrane known as VEGFR-1 (Flt-1), VEGFR-2 (Flk-1/
KDR
), and VEGFR-3 (Flt-4). All these receptor types possess an internal tyrosin kinase domain. Interaction of VEGF with particular subtypes of receptors activates a circuit of signaling pathways, e.g. PI3K/Akt, Ras/Raf-MEK/Erk, eNOS/NO, and IP3/Ca2+. These participate in the generation of specific biological responses connected with proliferation, migration, increasing vascular permeability, or promoting endothelial cell survival. Recent findings from experiments performed on animals with experimentally evoked focal cerebral ischemia suggest that the neuroprotective activity of VEGF runs in parallel with its ability to promote neurogenesis and angiogenesis and that these effects may operate independently through multiple mechanisms. The above-mentioned three major features characterizing the neurobiological activity of VEGF, i.e. neuroprotection, neurogenesis, and angiogenesis, together with their possible functional link(s), provide the rationale for considering VEGF-based therapy as a promising future avenue for a more effective treatment of at least some neurodegenerative disorders and stroke. Moreover, the possibility of using neutralizing factors of VEGF or VEGF receptor antagonists may reveal a way of preventing many dangerous pathologies, including post-ischemic disturbances in cardiac and neurological disorders, tumor growth, or hypervascularization in avascular structures of the eye.
...
PMID:[VEGF as an angiogenic, neurotrophic, and neuroprotective factor]. 1640 96
VEGF, Hedgehog, FGF, Notch, and WNT signaling pathways network together for vascular remodeling during embryogenesis, tissue regeneration, and carcinogenesis. VEGFA (VEGF), VEGFB,
VEGFC
, VEGFD (FIGF) and PGF (PlGF) are VEGF family ligands for receptor tyrosine kinases, including
VEGFR1
(FLT1),
VEGFR2
(
KDR
) and
VEGFR3
(
FLT4
). Bevacizumab (Avastin), Sunitinib (Sutent) and Sorafenib (Nexavar) are anti-cancer drugs targeted to VEGF signaling pathway. TCF/LEF binding sites within the promoter region of human VEGF family members were searched for by using bioinformatics and human intelligence (Humint). Because four TCF/LEF-binding sites were identified within the 5'-promoter region of human VEGFD gene within AC095351.5 genome sequence, comparative genomics analyses on VEGFD orthologs were further performed. ASB9-ASB11-VEGFD locus at human chromosome Xp22.2 and ASB5-
VEGFC
locus at human chromosome 4q34 were paralogous regions within the human genome. Human VEGFD mRNA was expressed in lung, small intestine, uterus, breast, neural tissues, and neuroblastoma. Mouse Vegfd mRNA was expressed in kidney, pregnant oviduct, and neural tissues. Chimpanzee VEGFD promoter, cow Vegfd promoter, mouse Vegfd promoter and rat Vegfd promoter were identified within NW_121675.1, AC161065.2, AL732475.6 and AC130036.3 genome sequences, respectively. Three out of four TCF/LEF-binding sites within human VEGFD promoter were conserved in chimpanzee VEGFD promoter, and one in cow Vegfd promoter. TCF/LEF-binding site, not conserved in human VEGFD promoter, occurred in cow, mouse and rat Vegfd promoters. At least five out of six bHLH-binding sites within human VEGFD proximal promoter region were conserved in chimpanzee VEGFD proximal promoter region, while only one in cow Vegfd proximal promoter region. Together these facts indicate that relatively significant promoter evolution occurred among mammalian VEGFD orthologs. Human VEGFD was characterized as a potent target gene of WNT/beta-catenin signaling pathway. VEGFD, implicated in angiogenesis and lymphatic metastasis, is a pharmacogenomics target in the field of oncology.
...
PMID:Comparative integromics on VEGF family members. 1668 60
Angiogenic processes are regulated by vascular endothelial growth factors (VEGFs) and their receptors
VEGFR1
(Flt-1), 2 (Flk-1) and 3 (Flt-4). While
VEGFR2
is thought to play a central role in tumor angiogenesis, anti-angiogenic therapies targeting
VEGFR2
in glioma models can show escape phenomena with secondary onset of angiogenesis. The purpose of this study was to find explanations for these processes by searching for alternative pathways regulating glioma angiogenesis and reveal a correlation with tumor grade. Thus,
VEGFR3
, which is not expressed in normal brain, and its ligands
VEGF-C
and -D, were assessed in high grade (WHO degrees IV, glioblastomas, GBM) and low grade gliomas [WHO degrees II astrocytomas (AII)]. In all GBM, a strong protein expression of
VEGFR3
was found on tumor endothelium,
VEGF-C
and -D expression was found on numerous cells in areas of high vascularization. On RNA level, a significant up-regulation of
VEGFR3
was detected in GBM compared to AII and non-neoplastic brain. In AII, only very moderate
VEGFR3
,
VEGF-C
and -D expression was found on protein and RNA level indicating a correlation of
VEGFR3
expression with tumor grade.
VEGFR3
signal in both grades was found predominantly on endothelial cells, confirmed by
VEGFR3
expression on isolated CD31 positive cells and the expression of various endothelial markers on
VEGFR3
-positive cells isolated from GBM. The demonstration of a complete angiogenic signaling system that is dependent on tumor grade may influence the traditional paradigm of glioma angiogenesis and may provide a basis for more effective anti-angiogenic treatment strategies.
...
PMID:Expression of VEGFR3 in glioma endothelium correlates with tumor grade. 1711 85
Impaired wound healing is a common complication of diabetes. Although it is well known that both macrophages and blood vessels are critical to wound repair, the role of wound-associated lymphatic vessels has not been well investigated. We report that both the presence of activated macrophages and the formation of lymphatic vessels are rate-limiting to the healing of diabetic wounds. We have previously shown that macrophages contribute to the lymphatic vessels that form during the acute phase of corneal wound healing. We now demonstrate that this is a general phenomenon; cells that co-stain for the macrophage marker F4/80 and the lymphatic markers LYVE-1 (lymphatic vascular endothelium hyaluronate receptor) and podoplanin contribute to lymphatic vessels in full-thickness wounds. LYVE-1-positive lymphatic vessels and CD31-positive blood vessels were significantly reduced in corneal wound healing in diabetic mice (db/db) (P < 0.02) compared with control (db/+) mice. Glucose treatment of control macrophages led to the down-regulation of the lymphatic-specific receptor
VEGFR3
and its ligands, vascular endothelial growth factor-C and -D (
VEGF-C
, -D). Interleukin-1beta stimulation rescued diabetic macrophage function; application of interleukin-1beta-treated db/db-derived macrophages to wounds in db/db mice induced lymphatic vessel formation and accelerated wound healing. These observations suggest a potential therapeutic approach for healing wounds in diabetic patients.
...
PMID:Decreased macrophage number and activation lead to reduced lymphatic vessel formation and contribute to impaired diabetic wound healing. 1739 58
The TLX/HOX11 subfamily of divergent homeobox genes are involved in various aspects of embryogenesis and, in the case of TLX1/HOX11 and TLX3/HOX11L2, feature prominently as oncogenes in human T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukaemia. TLX1 possesses immortalising activity in a wide variety of blood cell lineages, however, the effect of this oncogene on haemopoietic cell differentiation has not been fully investigated. We therefore constitutively expressed TLX1 in murine bone marrow or fetal liver cells using retroviral transfer followed by transplantation and/or in vitro culture. TLX1 was found to dramatically alter haemopoiesis, promoting the emergence of a non-haemopoietic CD45(-) CD31(+) cell population while markedly inhibiting erythroid and granulocytic cell differentiation. To identify genetic programs perturbed by TLX1, a comparison of transcript profiles from J2E erythroid cells with and without enforced TLX1 expression was undertaken. This revealed a pattern of gene expression indicative of enhanced proliferation coupled to differentiation arrest. Of the genes identified, two,
KIT
and
VEGFC
, were found to be potential TLX1 targets based on transcriptional assays. These results demonstrate that TLX1 can act broadly to impair haemopoiesis and divert differentiation to an alternative fate. This may account for its ability to promote the pre-leukaemic state via perturbation of specific gene expression programs.
...
PMID:TLX1/HOX11 transcription factor inhibits differentiation and promotes a non-haemopoietic phenotype in murine bone marrow cells. 1755 47
Numerous data show a functional link between lymphangiogenesis, lymph node invasion by tumoral cells and metastasis. During the last decade, the identification of lymphatic endothelial cell-specific markers has allowed the investigation of lymphangiogenesis regulatory mechanisms and the analysis of its involvement in tumoral progression. Among regulatory systems, the growth factors
VEGF-C
and D, that bind and activate their common receptor
VEGFR3
, appear to play an important role in this process. Therapeutic strategies targeting this pathway or, in a general manner, aiming at inhibiting tumoral lymphangiogenesis are now considered to block the development of tumoral metastasis. Further fundamental and clinical studies are clearly needed to establish the pronostic value of lymphangiogenesis and to validate anti-lymphangiogenic therapies in the treatment of metastatic cancers.
...
PMID:[Lymphangiogenesis and tumor progression]. 1796 82
Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a disease with a poor prognosis. It has been demonstrated that AML cells express the vascular endothelial growth factors, VEGFA and
VEGFC
, as well as kinase insert domain-containing receptor (
VEGFR2
), the main receptor for downstream effects, resulting in an autocrine pathway for cell survival. This study investigates the role of the VEGFR inhibitor PTK787/ZK 222584 in leukemic cell death, and the possibility of an additional effect on cell death by a chemotherapeutic drug, amsacrine. In three AML cell lines and 33 pediatric AML patient samples, we performed total cell-kill assays to determine the percentages of cell death achieved by PTK787/ZK 222584 and/or amsacrine. Both drugs induced AML cell death. Using a response surface analysis, we could show that, in cell lines as well as in primary AML blasts, an equal magnitude of leukemic cell death could be obtained when lower doses of the more toxic amsacrine were combined with low dosages of the less toxic VEGFR inhibitor. This study shows that PTK787/ZK 222584 might have more clinical potential in AML when combined with a chemotherapeutic drug such as amsacrine. In future, it will be interesting to study whether the complications and the long-term effects of chemotherapy can be reduced by lowering the dosages of amsacrine, and by replacing it with other drugs with lower toxicity profiles, such as PTK787/ZK 222584.
...
PMID:Addition of PTK787/ZK 222584 can lower the dosage of amsacrine to achieve equal amounts of acute myeloid leukemia cell death. 1804 29
Osteoclasts are bone-resorbing cells, but they also secrete and respond to cytokines. Here, we test the hypothesis that osteoclasts secrete the lymphatic growth factor,
VEGF-C
, to increase their resorptive activity. Osteoclasts and osteoclast precursors were generated by culturing splenocytes with macrophage colony-stimulating factor and RANKL from wild-type, NF-kappaBp50(-/-)/p52(-/-), and Src(-/-) mice. Expression of VEGFs was measured by real time reverse transcription-PCR, Western blotting, and immunostaining. The effect of
VEGF-C
signaling on osteoclast function was determined by osteoclastogenesis and pit assays. RANKL increased the expression of
VEGF-C
but not of other VEGFs in osteoclasts and their precursors. RANKL-induced
VEGF-C
expression was reduced in NF-kappaBp50(-/-)/p52(-/-) precursors or wild-type cells treated with an NF-kappaB inhibitor.
VEGF-C
directly stimulated RANKL-mediated bone resorption, which was reduced by the
VEGF-C
-specific receptor blocker,
VEGFR3
:Fc. Osteoclasts express
VEGFR3
, and
VEGF-C
stimulated Src phosphorylation in osteoclasts.
VEGF-C
-mediated bone resorption was abolished in Src(-/-) osteoclasts or cells treated with an Src inhibitor. We conclude that RANKL stimulates osteoclasts and their precursors to release
VEGF-C
through an NF-kappaB-dependent mechanism, indicating that
VEGF-C
is a new RANKL target gene in osteoclasts and functions as an autocrine factor regulating osteoclast activity.
...
PMID:VEGF-C, a lymphatic growth factor, is a RANKL target gene in osteoclasts that enhances osteoclastic bone resorption through an autocrine mechanism. 1835 70
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