| Literature DB >> 22481918 |
Tam Duong1, Peter Koopman, Mathias Francois.
Abstract
Metastasis the spread of cancer cells to distant organs, is the main cause of death for cancer patients. Metastasis is often mediated by lymphatic vessels that invade the primary tumor, and an early sign of metastasis is the presence of cancer cells in the regional lymph node (the first lymph node colonized by metastasizing cancer cells from a primary tumor). Understanding the interplay between tumorigenesis and lymphangiogenesis (the formation of lymphatic vessels associated with tumor growth) will provide us with new insights into mechanisms that modulate metastatic spread. In the long term, these insights will help to define new molecular targets that could be used to block lymphatic vessel-mediated metastasis and increase patient survival. Here, we review the molecular mechanisms of embryonic lymphangiogenesis and those that are recapitulated in tumor lymphangiogenesis, with a view to identifying potential targets for therapies designed to suppress tumor lymphangiogenesis and hence metastasis.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22481918 PMCID: PMC3307004 DOI: 10.1155/2012/204946
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Oncol ISSN: 1687-8450 Impact factor: 4.375
Figure 1Embryonic lymphangiogenesis versus tumor lymphangiogenesis. (a) During early lymphatic vessel development, lymphatic endothelial precursor cells (SOX18+/COUP-TFII+/PROX-1+) from the CV migrate outwards and form lymph sacs (LS), from which lymphatic vessels start to extend throughout the body. (b) In a tumor microenvironment, various lymphatic growth factors are secreted from tumor cells, inflammatory cells (e.g., TAMs), and stroma cells. These factors stimulate the formation of tumor neolymphatics, either in the peritumoral or intratumoral area, which facilitate the intravasation of cancer cells into lymphatic vessels. Interestingly, several key early factors in embryonic lymphangiogenesis also play critical roles during tumor lymphangiogenesis. In particular, SOX18 is not required for maintenance of adult lymphatics but appears to be reactivated and regulate the formation of tumor neolymphatics. CV, cardinal vein; LS, lymph sac; dpc, days coitum; GF, growth factor; LN, lymph node; DLN, draining lymph node; TAMs, tumor-associated macrophages.
Lymphangiogenic factors in the early steps of embryonic development and in adult.
| Key factors | Defects in lymphatic vascular system | |
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| Human syndrome | Mutant animals | |
| Transcription factors | ||
| SOX18 | Dominant-negative mutations of SOX18 have been linked with hypotrichosis-lymphedema-telangiectasia syndrome (OMIM no. 607823) [ |
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| COUP-TFII | Conditional inactivation of COUP-TFII during embryogenesis causes edema, haemorrhage, and blood-filled lymphatics [ | |
| PROX-1 | (i) | |
| TBX1 | TBX1 mutation causes DiGeorge human syndrome, which is associated with multiple congenital anomalies. | Mouse embryos with conditional deletion of Tbx1 in endothelial cells display widespread lymphangiogenesis defects and have perinatal death [ |
| NFATc-1 | (i) NFATc1-deficient mice showed irregular patterning of the LEC sprouting from the jugular lymph sac [ | |
| FOXC2 | Mutation in transcription factor FOXC2 caused lymphedema-distichiasis (LD) in human (OMIM no. 153400). |
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| Growth factors | ||
| VEGF-C | (i) The disruption of VEGF-C in mice, | |
| VEGF-D | VEGF-D deficiency mice displayed no lymphatic vessel dysfunction, suggesting that VEGF-D is dispensable and might not play a major role in lymphatic development [ | |
| Angiopoietin-2 |
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| Adrenomedullin |
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| Receptors/transmembrane proteins | ||
| VEGFR-3 | Heterozygous tyrosine kinase-inactivating missense point mutations of |
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| Integrin | (i) Integrin- | |
| LYVE-1 | (i) Mice lacking this receptor have normal lymphatic vessels. | |
| Podoplanin |
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| Neuropilin-2 |
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| Ephrin-B2 | Mice expressing a mutated form of Ephrin-B2 have major lymphatic defects, including disturbed postnatal lymphatic remodeling, hyperplasia, and lack of luminal valve formation, whereas the blood vasculature remained normal [ | |
| Clp24, Claudin-like protein of 24 kDa | (i) | |
| Liprin | Knock-down liprin | |
| Synectin | Knockdown of synectin in zebrafish causes impaired formation of the thoracic duct and defective lymphangiogenic sprouting [ | |
| ALK1, activin receptor-like kinase 1 | (i) ALK1 is a member of TGF- | |
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| Others | ||
| SYK and SLP-76 | Loss of SYK or SLP-76 function results in embryonic hemorrhage, arteriovenous shunting, blood-lymphatic connections, and blood-filled lymphatics [ | |
| CCBE1 | Mutation in CCBE1 associates with the Hennekam syndrome, a generalised lymphatic dysplasia in humans [ | CCBE1 has been identified as essential factor for embryonic lymphangiogenesis and venous sprouting in zebrafish model [ |
| Aspp1, apoptosis-stimulating protein of p53 |
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| Emilin-1 |
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| miR-31, microRNA-targeting PROX1 | Gain of miR-31 function leads to impaired venous sprouting and lymphatic vascular development in | |
| Rac1, Rho family GTPase | Deletion of endothelial | |
| Spred-1/2 | Spred-1/2 -deficient embryos display subcutaneous haemorrhage, edema, dilated and blood-filled lymphatic vessels and die | |
Figure 2Biology of tumor lymphangiogenesis and metastasis. (A), (B) Stimulation of tumor neo-lymphangiogenesis and enlargement of tumor lymphatics can facilitate intravasation of cancer cells into the lymphatics. (C) The interaction between tumor cells and LECs via tumor cell receptors (e.g., Integrin α4β1) and endothelial cell adhesion molecules (e.g., VCAM-1) or via chemokine receptor ligand interaction (e.g., CCR7/CCL21) can facilitate the invasion of cancer cells into lymphatic vessels (intralymphatic cancer cells). (E) Notably, lymphangiogenesis also occurs at the tumor draining lymph node (DLN) before metastasis of cancer cells to this site, probably to generate a favourable environment for in-coming metastatic cancer cells at this site. (F) Intralymphatic cancer cells then metastasize to the tumor DLN. (D), (sG) Additionally, tumor angiogenesis also contributes to distant organ metastasis. The tumor microenvironment has a critical impact on tumor progression and metastasis. LECs, lymphatic endothelial cells; DLN, draining lymph node.
Tumor lymphangiogenic growth factors and their receptors.
| Lymphangiogenic factors | Receptors | Mechanism of action/association with cancer | References |
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| VEGF-C | VEGFR-2, VEGFR-3 | (i) Overexpression of VEGF-C by tumor induces tumor lymphangiogenesis, dilated lymphatics and increases metastasis to lymph node. | [ |
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| VEGF-D | VEGFR-2, VEGFR-3 | (i) VEGF-D plays a role in stimulation of tumor lymphangiogenesis and lymph node metastasis. | [ |
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| VEGF-A | VEGFR-2 | (i) VEGF-A induces tumor lymphangiogenesis and tumor metastasis to regional lymph node. | [ |
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| FGF-2 | FGFR-3 [ | (i) Induces both angiogenesis and lymphangiogenesis through the control of VEGF-C and VEGF-D expression. | [ |
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| Hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) | c-met | (i) Overexpression of HGF in mice/intradermal delivered HGF induces lymphatic vessel hyperplasia. | [ |
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| Insulin-like growth factor-1, 2 | Insulin-like growth factor receptor | (i) IGF-1, -2 induce lymphangiogenesis in a mouse cornea assay. | [ |
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| Ephrin-B2 | Eph. receptor tyrosine kinase | (i) PDZ interaction site in Ephrin-B2 is required for the remodelling of lymphatic vasculature. | [ |
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| Angiopoietin-1, -2 (Ang-1, -2) | Tie-2 | (i) Overexpression of Ang-1 in adult mouse tissues leads to lymphatic sprouting and hyperplasia. | [ |
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| PDGF-BB | PDGFR- | Expression of PDGF-BB in murine fibrosarcoma cells induced intratumoral lymphangiogenesis and promote lymphatic metastasis | [ |
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| Growth hormone (GH) | Growth hormone receptor | (i) GH promotes lymphangiogenesis in the granulation tissue of full-thickness skin wounds. | [ |
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| Adrenomedulin (AM) | Calcrl associated with RAMP2 (*) | AM is a multifunctional regulatory peptide that is overexpressed in cancer cells and help them to develop to malignant growth. | [ |
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| Endothelin-1 (ET-1) | Endotheline B receptor (ETBR) | (i) ET-1/ETBR expression is correlated with lymphatic invasion in human breast cancers. | [ |
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| Neutrin-4 | (i) Netrin-4 is expressed in human breast tumor lymphatic and blood vessels. | [ | |
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| Fibronectin | Integrin | High expression of integrin | [ |
*Calcrl: calcitonin receptor-like receptor; RAMP2: receptor activity-modifying protein.
Figure 3Potential cellular origins of tumor lymphatic endothelial cells. (A) Neolymphatics mainly arise from preexisting vasculature by proliferation and migration of LECs. (B) Bone marrow-derived endothelial progenitor cells (e.g., tumor-associated macrophages—TAMs) can also transdifferentiate into LECs, which further incorporate into the pre-existing lymphatic vasculature. (C) BECs can transdifferentiate into LECs under stimulation of reexpressed lymphatic transcription factors and lymphatic growth factor receptors. This mechanism has not been shown in in vivo (dashed line arrow).
Tumor lymphangiogenic transcription factors.
| Transcription factors | Target genes | Association with cancer | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| PROX-1 | Genes involved in proteolysis, lymphatic differentiation, cell adhesion, and migration | (i) Prox1 is strongly expressed by human Kaposi's sarcoma (a neoplasm of KSHV-infected vascular endothelium). (*) | [ |
| SOX18 | Prox-1, VCAM-1, Claudin-5 | (i) SOX18 plays a critical role in initial steps of tumor angiogenesis and subsequent induction of tumor growth. | [ |
| COUP-TFII | (i) Nrp2, coreceptor for VEGF-C | (i) Essential factor for tumor-induced neo-lymphangiogenesis in spontaneous mouse breast cancer model | [ |
| FOXC2 | Integrin | (i) FOXC2 might regulate tumor angiogenesis by target genes including integrin | [ |
*KSHV: Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus (the involvement of lymphatic transcription factors—NFATc1 and Tbx1— in cancer metastasis has not been reported recently).
Preclinical studies of anti-lymphangiogenic effect on tumor metastasis.
| Drugs | Experiment/cancer model | Effect | References |
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| siRNA VEGF-C | Mouse mammary tumor model (C166-siVEGFC) | Reduction in tumor lymphangiogenesis, lymph node metastasis, and spontaneous lung metastasis | [ |
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| Human monoclonal antibody VC (anti-VEGF-C) |
| (i) Bind with high specificity and affinity to full processed mature form of human VEGF-C | [ |
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| VEGFR31-Ig | Mouse model of a highly metastatic human hepatocellular carcinoma (HCCLM3) | (i) Simultaneously bind VEGF-A, VEGF-C. | [ |
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| VD1 monoclonal Ab (anti-VEGF-D) | Immunodeficient mice, 293EBNA express VEGF-D (mAbs raised to VDH of hVEGF-D (antagonists)) | Reduce the LN metastasis from 61% to 0% | [ |
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| Monoclonal Ab to VEGFR-3 | Regeneration of adult lymphatic vessels | Block the regeneration of lymphatic vessels in adult | [ |
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| VEGFR-3 monoclonal antibody | Mouse model of MDA-MB-435/GFP human breast cancer transfected with human VEGF-C cDNA | Suppress tumor lymphangiogenesis and restrict metastatic spread to lymph nodes and distant organs | [ |
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| Soluble VEGFR-3 (VEGFR-3-Ig) | Highly metastasis human lung cancer cells (LNM35) stably expressing VEGFR-3-Ig or recombinant adenovirus expressing VEGFR-3-Ig were injected to LNM35 tumor-bearing mice | (i) Inhibition of intra- and peritumoral lymphangiogenesis | [ |
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| Soluble VEGFR-3 (VEGFR-3-Rg) | Immunocompetent rat model induced with highly metastatic MT-450 cancer cells expressing VEGFR-3 soluble | (i) Reduction in the number of peritumor lymphatic vessels | [ |
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| Soluble VEGFR-3 decoy receptor (sVEGFR3-Fc) | Mouse model of human melanoma, human prostate injected with recombinant adeno-associated viral vector sVEGFR3-Fc (rAAV-sVEGFR3-Fc) Treatment before tumor implantation | (i) Melanoma: inhibit LN metastasis, but have less effect on lung metastasis | [ |
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| Soluble VEGFR-3 | Mouse model of prostate cancer (PC-3): subcutaneously or surgical orthotopic implantation | Reduction in intratumoral lymphatics, but metastasis to LN was not significantly affected | [ |
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| Ki23057 | Mouse model of gastric cancer induced by orthotopic inoculation of OCUM-2MLN cells | (i) Ki23057 is a tyrosine kinase inhibitor, block autophosphorylation of VEGFR-3 | [ |
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| Anti- neutropilin-2 | Mouse model of breast adenocarcinoma (66C14) and rodent glioblastoma (C6) | Reduction in tumor lymphangiogenesis, metastasis to sentinel lymph nodes and distant organs | [ |
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| Celecoxib (COX-2 inhibitor) | Mouse model of highly metastasis human lung adeocarcinoma | Suppression of the lymphangiogenesis and lymph node metastasis through downregulation of VEGF-C expression. | [ |
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| Antagonists of integrin | Mouse model of Lewis lung carcinoma and B16 melanoma cancer | Significant suppression of lymphangiogenesis and metastasis | [ |
Clinical trials of tyrosine kinase inhibitors on the VEGF pathway.
| Drugs | Clinical trials | Target | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| PTK787/ZK 222584 (chloroanilino-pyridylmethyl phthalazine succinate) | Phase III for colorectal cancer Phase I, II for advanced hepatocellular carcinoma patients (in combination with intravenous doxorubicin) | Target VEGFR-3, -2, -1, PDGFR-beta (need new strategies for trials to specifically monitor effects on metastasis) | [ |
| CEP-7055 (N, N-dimethyl glycine ester) | Phase I as an oral-administered therapy for various malignancies | Target VEGFR-3, -2, -1 | [ |
| BAY 43-9006 (Bi-aryl urea) | Phase III for renal cell carcinoma | Target VEGFR-3, -2 tyrosine kinase, PDGFR-beta, FGFR-1 | [ |
| JNJ-26483327 | Phase I for patients with advanced solid tumors | Multitargeted tyrosine kinase inhibitor, inhibiting kinase of (EGFR)-1, -2, -4; VEGFR-3, Src family (Lyn, Fyn, Yes) | [ |
| SU-014813 | Phase I for patients with advance solid tumors | Oral multitargeted tyrosine kinase inhibitor | [ |
(modified from the table in paper “Focus on lymphangiogenesis in tumor metastasis”- Cancer cell, Achen et al., 2005 [206]).
Figure 4Schematic for potential clinical strategies in treatment of metastatic disease. (A) Tumor progression can be evaluated based on several prognostic indicators including tumor lymphangiogenesis and sentinal LNs status. These steps will guide the therapeutic decision to adopt anti-lymphangiogenic strategies if the tumor appears to be lymphangiogenesis-dependent and/or to have lymph node metastasis. (B) Antiangiogenesis, anti-lymphangiogenesis, and chemotherapy can be applied to reduce tumor growth and restrict metastasis before surgery. For advanced disease or nonresectable tumors, there will be no surgery [171]. (C) Photodynamic therapy (PDT) also can be performed before removal of the primary tumor, to eradicate in-transit tumor cells and prevent tumor relapse. Anti-lymphangiogenic, antiangiogenic, and chemotherapy can also be applied later, to prevent tumor regrowth and metastasis. (D) Cancer recurrence can be monitored by checking sentinel LN status, lymphangiogenic and angiogenic growth factor levels. PDT, photodynamic therapy; LN, lymph node; LVD, lymphatic vessel density; GF, growth factor (adapted from [171]).