Literature DB >> 24574516

Spontaneous reversion of the angiogenic phenotype to a nonangiogenic and dormant state in human tumors.

Michael S Rogers1, Katherine Novak, David Zurakowski, Lorna M Cryan, Anna Blois, Eugene Lifshits, Trond H Bø, Anne M Oyan, Elise R Bender, Michael Lampa, Soo-Young Kang, Kamila Naxerova, Karl-Henning Kalland, Oddbjorn Straume, Lars A Akslen, Randolph S Watnick, Judah Folkman, George N Naumov.   

Abstract

UNLABELLED: The angiogenic switch, a rate-limiting step in tumor progression, has already occurred by the time most human tumors are detectable. However, despite significant study of the mechanisms controlling this switch, the kinetics and reversibility of the process have not been explored. The stability of the angiogenic phenotype was examined using an established human liposarcoma xenograft model. Nonangiogenic cells inoculated into immunocompromised mice formed microscopic tumors that remained dormant for approximately 125 days (vs. <40 days for angiogenic cells) whereupon the vast majority (>95%) initiated angiogenic growth with second-order kinetics. These original, clonally derived angiogenic tumor cells were passaged through four in vivo cycles. At each cycle, a new set of single-cell clones was established from the most angiogenic clone and characterized for in vivo for tumorigenic activity. A total of 132 single-cell clones were tested in the second, third, and fourth in vivo passage. Strikingly, at each passage, a portion of the single-cell clones formed microscopic, dormant tumors. Following dormancy, like the original cell line, these revertant tumors spontaneously switched to the angiogenic phenotype. Finally, revertant clones were transcriptionally profiled and their angiogenic output determined. Collectively, these data demonstrate that the angiogenic phenotype in tumors is malleable and can spontaneously revert to the nonangiogenic phenotype in a population of human tumor cells. IMPLICATIONS: Leveraging the rate of reversion to the nonangiogenic phenotype and tumor dormancy may be a novel anticancer strategy. ©2014 AACR.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 24574516      PMCID: PMC4020951          DOI: 10.1158/1541-7786.MCR-13-0532-T

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Cancer Res        ISSN: 1541-7786            Impact factor:   5.852


  47 in total

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