| Literature DB >> 19519209 |
Emma S Rennel1, Steven J Harper, David O Bates.
Abstract
Anti-angiogenic therapies currently revolve around targeting vascular endothelial growth factor-A (VEGF-A) or its receptors. These therapies are effective to some degree, but have low response rates and poor side-effect profiles. Part of these problems is likely to be due to their lack of specificity between pro- and anti-angiogenic isoforms, and their nonspecific effects on proactive, pleiotropic survival and maintenance roles of VEGF-A in endothelial and other cell types. An alternative approach, and one which has recently been shown to be effective in animal models of neovascularization in the eye, is to target the mechanisms by which the cell generates pro-angiogenic splice forms of VEGF-A, its receptors and, co-incidentally, by targeting the upstream processes, other oncogenes that have antagonistic splice isoforms. The concept here is to target the splicing mechanisms that control splice site choice in the VEGF-A mRNA. Recent evidence on the pharmacological possibilities of such splice factors is described.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19519209 PMCID: PMC2879319 DOI: 10.2217/fon.09.33
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Future Oncol ISSN: 1479-6694 Impact factor: 3.404