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Query: UMLS:C1519670 (
tumor angiogenesis
)
6,052
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Polypeptide growth factors contribute to the development and maintenance of normal tissues and are essential for the growth and metastasis of solid tumors. During tumor progression these factors function as autocrine stimulators of tumor cells and/or serve to recruit stromal tissue and blood supply to the expanding tumor. In particular, tumor-induced angiogenesis appears to be significant not only for local tumor growth but also for metastasis to distant organ sites. We purified several years ago the heparin-binding growth factor
pleiotrophin
(
PTN
) from the supernatants of human breast cancer cells and demonstrated that
PTN
can serve as an angiogenesis factor. We found the gene expressed in a number of human tumor cell lines as well as in human tumor tissues. Here we present different approaches to inhibit production and function of this growth factor. Finally we discuss how the experience from this growth factor can be applied to improve our understanding of the role of other factors thought to contribute to
tumor angiogenesis
.
...
PMID:Molecular and pharmacologic targeting of angiogenesis factors--the example of pleiotrophin. 853 64
Several groups have shown that quantitation of
tumor angiogenesis
by counting blood vessels in primary breast cancer gives an independent assessment of prognosis. Poor prognosis is associated with high blood vessel counts. We have shown that the rate of cell division in endothelial cells is much higher in breast tumours than in normal breast. Breast cancer cell lines and primary human breast tumours express a wide range of vascular growth factors, including VEGF, placenta growth factor,
pleiotrophin
, TGF beta 1, acidic and basic FGF, and platelet-derived endothelial cell growth factor. Inhibiting angiogenesis by blocking vascular growth factors would be difficult with highly specific agents, but drugs with a broader spectrum of antagonism may be effective. We have developed several suramin analogues which are less toxic than suramin in vivo but more potent in inhibiting angiogenesis, and these have been developed for Phase I. A combination of anti-angiogenesis agents with drugs activated by hypoxia may also be useful, because anti-angiogenesis alone may not kill cells, whereas activation of hypoxic drugs could synergize. New endpoints may be necessary because inhibition of new blood vessel formation may not cause tumour regression. Thus, the endpoint of stable disease and biochemical assessment of inhibition of angiogenesis may be much more important in therapeutic studies and for drug development in the future. The prognostic importance of angiogenesis suggests that this should be a major new therapeutic target.
...
PMID:Breast cancer angiogenesis--new approaches to therapy via antiangiogenesis, hypoxic activated drugs, and vascular targeting. 882 27
Clinical and experimental evidence suggests that spreading of malignant cells from a localized tumor (metastasis) is directly related to the number of microvessels in the primary tumor. This
tumor angiogenesis
is thought to be mediated by tumor-cell-derived growth factors. However, most tumor cells express a multitude of candidate angiogenesis factors and it is difficult to decipher which of these are rate-limiting factors in vivo. Herein we use ribozyme targeting of
pleiotrophin
(
PTN
) in metastatic human melanoma cells to assess the significance of this secreted growth factor for angiogenesis and metastasis. As a model we used human melanoma cells (1205LU) that express high levels of
PTN
and metastasize from subcutaneous tumors to the lungs of experimental animals. In these melanoma cells, we reduced
PTN
mRNA and growth factor activity by transfection with
PTN
-targeted ribozymes and generated cell lines expressing different levels of
PTN
. We found that the reduction of
PTN
does not affect growth of the melanoma cells in vitro. In nude mice, however, tumor growth and angiogenesis were decreased in parallel with the reduced
PTN
levels and apoptosis in the tumors was increased. Concomitantly, the metastatic spread of the tumors from the subcutaneous site to the lungs was prevented. These studies support a direct link between
tumor angiogenesis
and metastasis through a secreted growth factor and identify
PTN
as a candidate factor that may be rate-limiting for human melanoma metastasis.
...
PMID:Melanoma angiogenesis and metastasis modulated by ribozyme targeting of the secreted growth factor pleiotrophin. 896 27
The heparin-binding polypeptide homologs
pleiotrophin
and midkine are the only known members of a family of secreted growth/differentiation cytokines.
Pleiotrophin
and midkine are both developmentally regulated and highly conserved among species. They signal a number of physiological functions involved with angiogenesis, neuorogenesis, cell migration, and mesoderm-epithelial interactions. Constitutive expression of
pleiotrophin
and midkine in responsive cells support their role as "tumor growth factors" and positive regulators of
tumor angiogenesis
. Widespread deregulation of
pleiotrophin
and midkine is found in many known human cancers or their derived cell lines, and the molecular targeting of
pleiotrophin
to block its signaling in tumor cells has limited tumor growth and metastasis in animal models. Elucidating the molecular mechanisms of
pleiotrophin
and midkine action in tumorgenesis and
tumor angiogenesis
may lead to the identification of novel targets for tumor therapy.
...
PMID:Pleiotrophin and midkine, a family of mitogenic and angiogenic heparin-binding growth and differentiation factors. 991 53
HARP (heparin affin regulatory peptide), also called
pleiotrophin
(
PTN
), belongs to the heparin binding growth factors (HBGFs) family. Several new data suggest a role for HARP during the various stages of angiogenesis. In vivo, HARP is localised in endothelial cells of blood capillaries. In vitro, HARP displays mitogenic activity on endothelial cells, induces the formation of capillary-like structures in collagen gel, and degrades extracellular matrix via stimulation of plasminogen activator activity. HARP is also involved in neoangiogenesis during tumor progression. This review discusses the possible role of HARP in
tumor angiogenesis
and its therapeutic implications.
...
PMID:[Implication of HARP in angiogenesis and possible therapeutic role]. 1037 4
Pleiotrophin
(
PTN
) is a developmentally regulated protein that has been shown to be involved in tumor growth and metastasis presumably by activating
tumor angiogenesis
. To clarify the potential angiogenic activity of
PTN
and to analyze the signaling pathways involved in this process, we used an in vitro model of Human Umbilical Vein Endothelial Cells (HUVEC). We show that
PTN
was mitogenic toward a variety of endothelial cells including HUVEC, stimulated HUVEC migration across a reconstituted basement membrane and induced the formation of capillary-like structures by HUVEC grown as 3D-cultures in Matrigel or collagen. The signaling pathways triggered following endothelial cell stimulation by
PTN
were studied by using pharmacological inhibitors of the Phosphoinositide-3 kinase (PI3K) and endothelial Nitric Oxide Synthase (eNOS), two enzymes that have been shown to be crucial in the angiogenic response to Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor (VEGF). Whereas wortmannin (a PI3K inhibitor) and L-NAME (an eNOS inhibitor) dramatically reduced HUVEC growth induced by VEGF, only the former inhibitor reduced the growth induced by
PTN
and to a lesser extent that stimulated by basic Fibroblast Growth Factor. Thus, our results indicate that
PTN
induces angiogenesis and utilizes PI3K- but not eNOS-dependent pathways for its angiogenic activity.
...
PMID:Pleiotrophin induces angiogenesis: involvement of the phosphoinositide-3 kinase but not the nitric oxide synthase pathways. 1124 49
Pleiotrophin
(
PTN
the protein, Ptn the gene) is a 136 amino acid secreted heparin-binding cytokine that signals diverse functions, including lineage-specific differentiation of glial progenitor cells, neurite outgrowth, and angiogenesis.
Pleiotrophin
gene expression is found in cells in early differentiation during different development periods and upregulated in cells with an early differentiation phenotype in wound repair. The Ptn gene is a protooncogene. It is strongly expressed in different human tumor cells and expression of the Ptn gene in tumor cells in vivo accelerates growth and stimulates
tumor angiogenesis
. Separate independent domains have been identified in
PTN
to signal transformation and
tumor angiogenesis
.
Pleiotrophin
is the first ligand of any of the known transmembrane tyrosine phosphatases.
Pleiotrophin
inactivates the receptor protein tyrosine phosphatase (RPTP) beta/zeta. The interaction of
PTN
and RPTP beta/zeta increases steady-state tyrosine phosphorylation of beta-catenin.
Pleiotrophin
thus regulates both normal cell functions and different pathological conditions at many levels. It signals these functions through a transmembrane tyrosine phosphatase.
...
PMID:Pleiotrophin: a cytokine with diverse functions and a novel signaling pathway. 1179 67
It is generally believed that active invasion by cancer cells is essential to the metastatic process. In this report, we describe a murine mammary tumor (MCH66) model of metastasis that does not require invasion into the vascular wall of both the primary tumor and the target organ, in this case, the lung. The process involves intravasation of tumor nests surrounded by sinusoidal blood vessels, followed by intravascular tumor growth in the lung, without penetration of the vascular wall during the process. Comparative studies using a nonmetastatic MCH66 clone (MCH66C8) and another highly invasive metastatic cell line (MCH416) suggested that high angiogenic activity and sinusoidal remodeling of tumor blood vessels were prerequisites for MCH66 metastasis. Differential cDNA analysis identified several genes that were overexpressed by MCH66, including genes for the angiogenesis factor
pleiotrophin
, and extracellular matrix-associated molecules that may modulate the microenvironment toward neovascularization. Our analyses suggest that
tumor angiogenesis
plays a role in the induction of invasion-independent metastasis. This model should prove useful in screening and development of new therapeutic agents for cancer metastasis.
...
PMID:An invasion-independent pathway of blood-borne metastasis: a new murine mammary tumor model. 1205 96
Heparin affin regulatory peptide (HARP), also known as
pleiotrophin
or
heparin-binding growth-associated molecule
, is an 18-kDa growth factor that has a high affinity for heparin. It constitutes with midkine and retinoic acid heparin-binding protein, a family of structurally related heparin-binding growth factors. A growing body of evidence indicates that HARP is involved in the control of cellular proliferation, migration and differentiation and plays a significant role in tumor growth and angiogenesis. HARP has a well described role in physiological as well as
tumor angiogenesis
, and is detected in various carcinomas, such as human breast and prostate cancer, neuroblastomas, gliomas, benign meningiomas, small cell lung cancer and mammary tumors, exhibiting a proto-oncogene function. It is also constitutively expressed in tumour cell lines and is involved in tumour growth and metastasis. Therefore, HARP appears to be a potential new target for the treatment or/and diagnosis of several types of cancer.
...
PMID:Heparin affin regulatory peptide: a new target for tumour therapy? 1537 33
Neoplasms progress through genetic and epigenetic mutations that deregulate pathways in the malignant cell that stimulate more aggressive growth of the malignant cell itself and/or remodel the tumor microenvironment to support the developing tumor mass. The appearance of new blood vessels in malignant tumors is known as the "angiogenic switch." The angiogenic switch triggers a stage of rapid tumor growth supported by extensive
tumor angiogenesis
and a more aggressive tumor phenotype and its onset is a poor prognostic indicator for host survival. Identification of the factors that stimulate the angiogenic switch thus is of high importance.
Pleiotrophin
(
PTN
the protein, Ptn the gene) is an angiogenic factor and the Ptn gene has been found to be constitutively expressed in many human tumors of different cell types. These studies use a nude mouse model to test if Ptn constitutively expressed in premalignant cells is sufficient to trigger an angiogenic switch in vivo. We introduced an ectopic Ptn gene into "premalignant" SW-13 cells and analyzed the phenotype of SW-13 Ptn cell tumor implants in the flanks of nude mice. SW-13 Ptn cell subcutaneous tumor implants grew very rapidly and had a striking increase in the density of new blood vessels compared to the SW-13 cell tumor implants, suggesting that constitutive
PTN
signaling in the premalignant SW-13 cell implants in the nude mouse recapitulates fully the angiogenic switch. It was found also that ectopic expression of the C-terminal domain of
PTN
in SW-13 cell implants was equally effective in initiating an angiogenic switch as the full-length
PTN
whereas implants of SW-13 cells in nude mice that express the N-terminal domain of
PTN
grew rapidly but failed to develop
tumor angiogenesis
. The data suggest the possibility that mutations that activate Ptn in premalignant cells are sufficient to stimulate an angiogenic switch in vivo and, since these mutations are frequently found in human malignancies, that constitutive
PTN
signaling may be an important contributor to progression of human tumors. The data also suggest that the C-terminal and the N-terminal domains of
PTN
equally initiate switches in premalignant cells to cells of a more aggressive tumor phenotype but the separate domains of
PTN
signal different mechanisms and perhaps signal through activation of a separate receptor-like protein.
...
PMID:Identification of the angiogenesis signaling domain in pleiotrophin defines a mechanism of the angiogenic switch. 1655 21
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