| Literature DB >> 26577811 |
Guillaume Collet1, Krzysztof Szade1, Witold Nowak1, Krzysztof Klimkiewicz1, Bouchra El Hafny-Rahbi2, Karol Szczepanek1, Daisuke Sugiyama3, Kazimierz Weglarczyk2, Alexandra Foucault-Collet2, Alan Guichard2, Andrzej Mazan1, Mahdi Nadim2, Fabienne Fasani2, Nathalie Lamerant-Fayel2, Catherine Grillon2, Stéphane Petoud2, Jean-Claude Beloeil2, Alicja Jozkowicz4, Jozef Dulak5, Claudine Kieda6.
Abstract
Hypoxia-inducing pathologies as cancer develop pathologic and inefficient angiogenesis which rules tumor facilitating microenvironment, a key target for therapy. As such, the putative ability of endothelial precursor cells (EPCs) to specifically home to hypoxic sites of neovascularization prompted to design optimized, site-specific, cell-mediated, drug-/gene-targeting approach. Thus, EPC lines were established from aorta-gonad-mesonephros (AGM) of murine 10.5 dpc and 11.5 dpc embryo when endothelial repertoire is completed. Lines representing early endothelial differentiation steps were selected: MAgEC10.5 and MagEC11.5. Distinct in maturation, they differently express VEGF receptors, VE-cadherin and chemokine/receptors. MAgEC11.5, more differentiated than MAgEC 10.5, displayed faster angiogenesis in vitro, different response to hypoxia and chemokines. Both MAgEC lines cooperated to tube-like formation with mature endothelial cells and invaded tumor spheroids through a vasculogenesis-like process. In vivo, both MAgEC-formed vessels established blood flow. Intravenously injected, both MAgECs invaded Matrigel(TM)-plugs and targeted tumors. Here we show that EPCs (MAgEC11.5) target tumor angiogenesis and allow local overexpression of hypoxia-driven soluble VEGF-receptor2 enabling drastic tumor growth reduction. We propose that such EPCs, able to target tumor angiogenesis, could act as therapeutic gene vehicles to inhibit tumor growth by vessel normalization resulting from tumor hypoxia alleviation.Entities:
Keywords: Cell gene therapy; Endothelial precursor cells; Pathologic angiogenesis/vasculogenesis; Tumor targeting
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26577811 DOI: 10.1016/j.canlet.2015.11.008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Lett ISSN: 0304-3835 Impact factor: 8.679