| Literature DB >> 28301873 |
Maria J Bueno1, Silvana Mouron1, Miguel Quintela-Fandino1,2.
Abstract
Pathological angiogenesis involves complex and dynamic interactions between tumour cells and other lineages existing in the microenvironment of the tumour. Preclinical and clinical data suggest that tumours can show dual, different adaptive responses against antiangiogenic agents: one successful adaptation is vascular normalisation, whereas the second adaptation is elicited through vascular trimming and increased hypoxia. These phenomena depend on the type of tumour and the type of agent. The classical approach for investigating acquired resistance against antiangiogenic agents is to identify compensatory signalling pathways emerging in response to VEGF blockade, which has led to the development of highly effective drugs; however, ultimately these drugs fail. Here we review how the dual stromal adaptive patterns determine the mechanisms of escape that go beyond the reprogramming of signal transduction pathways, which obliges us to investigate the tumour as an ecosystem and to develop uni- and multicompartmental models that explain drug resistance involving metabolic and immune reprogramming. We also propose a method for facilitating personalised therapeutic decisions, which uses 18F-fluoromisonidazole-positron emission tomography to monitor the dual stromal response in tumours of individual patients.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28301873 PMCID: PMC5418445 DOI: 10.1038/bjc.2017.69
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
Figure 1Tumour angiogenesis: molecular pathways and potential interventional strategies. VEGF axis is recognised as the primary factor responsible for tumour angiogenesis resistance. Upon VEGF binding, the receptor tyrosine is activated. VEGF/VEGFR activates oncogenic signalling via mitogen-activated protein kinase (ERK/MAPK) pathway, the phosphotidylinositol 3 kinase (PI3K-AKT) pathway, and the phospholipase-C-γ (PLC-γ) pathway leading to cell proliferation, survival, migration, and vascular permeability. Chronic VEGF/VEGFR inhibition has been found to lead to the emergence of compensatory signalling pathways that sustain angiogenesis. Several of these VEGF-independent signalling pathways, rely on key proteins, including the FGF/FGFR, angiopoietin-2 (Ang2), and the MET oncogene. Complementary therapies focused on these alternative pathways have been developed to abrogate acquired resistance. Pan-FGFR inhibitors are used to inhibit the FGF/FGFR axis. The MET/HGF pathway is inhibited by HGF antagonists and by the anti-MET antibody cabozantinib. Ang-Tie axis can be targeted with trebananib, a peptibody that inhibits the binding of Ang1/2 to their receptor. Tumour microenvironment and interactions between tumour cells and non-malignant cells as fibroblast and leukocytes also affect angiogenesis by interfering with the signalling pathways required for cell recruitment and vascular construction.
Figure 2Dual microenviromental adaptive response against antiangiogenic therapies and its clinical implications. Tumours can exhibit a dual different adaptive response, vascular ‘normalisation' (associated to hypoxia correction) or vascular pruning (associated to increased hypoxia), that would be determined by the type of antiangiogenic agent, dynamic changes in the concentrations of pro- and antiangiogenic factors, administration timing, and tumour type. Vascular normalisation corrects oxygenation leading to a metabolic switch. This metabolic reprogramming requires the interaction of several specialised cell lineages in the tumour microenvironment and it is characterised by an increased in dependence on mitochondrial metabolism. Upon this situation tumours become vulnerable to mitochondrial inhibitors inducing the phenomenon of metabolic synthetic lethality. The process may not be homogeneous: some tumour areas may experience hypoxia correction and others hypoxia increase. In this case, an alternative model proposes a metabolic compartmentalisation of tumours. In hypoxic regions cells import and metabolise glucose, whereas in normoxic regions tumour cells activate lactate catabolism leading to the upregulation of mTOR signalling. The resulting upregulation of mTOR signalling could be disrupted by the administration of mTOR inhibitors. Finally, the reprogramming may not be limited to cancer metabolism: vascular pruning and increased hypoxia as response against antiangiogenics can be associated with an immunosuppressive phenotype opening an opportunity for the novel immunotherapies.