| Literature DB >> 26239146 |
Tsunaki Hongu1, Yuji Funakoshi1, Shigetomo Fukuhara2, Teruhiko Suzuki1, Susumu Sakimoto3, Nobuyuki Takakura3, Masatsugu Ema4, Satoru Takahashi4, Susumu Itoh5, Mitsuyasu Kato5, Hiroshi Hasegawa1, Naoki Mochizuki2, Yasunori Kanaho1.
Abstract
Anti-angiogenic drugs targeting vascular endothelial cell growth factor receptor have provided modest clinical benefit, in part, owing to the actions of additional angiogenic factors that stimulate tumour neoangiogenesis in parallel. To overcome this redundancy, approaches targeting these other signalling pathways are required. Here we show, using endothelial cell-targeted mice, that the small GTPase Arf6 is required for hepatocyte growth factor (HGF)-induced tumour neoangiogenesis and growth. Arf6 deletion from endothelial cells abolishes HGF-stimulated β1 integrin recycling. Pharmacological inhibition of the Arf6 guanine nucleotide exchange factor (GEF) Grp1 efficiently suppresses tumour vascularization and growth. Grp1 as well as other Arf6 GEFs, such as GEP100, EFA6B and EFA6D, regulates HGF-stimulated β1 integrin recycling. These findings provide insight into the mechanism of HGF-induced tumour angiogenesis and offer the possibility that targeting the HGF-activated Arf6 signalling pathway may synergize with existing anti-angiogenic drugs to improve clinical outcomes.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26239146 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms8925
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919