| Literature DB >> 31205452 |
Yue-Tao Zhou1, Wei-Wei Cai1, Yue Li1,2, Xiao Jiang3, Lei Feng1, Qiao-Ying Zhu3, Yan-Ling Liu1,2, Yu-Xiao Chen1, Shuang-Shuang Li1, Bin Du1, Florian Lang4, Peng-Xi Wu3, Li-Ying Qiu1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Vasculogenic mimicry (VM) is a novel mechanism of tumor blood supply distinct from endothelial vessel (EV). VM is associated with malignancy, invasion, metastasis, and poor prognosis. Hitherto a noninvasive method for the assessment of VM in vivo has been lacking.Entities:
Keywords: Contrast-enhanced ultrasound; Murine tumor model; Quantitative parameter; Vasculogenic mimicry
Year: 2019 PMID: 31205452 PMCID: PMC6560886 DOI: 10.1186/s12575-019-0101-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Proced Online ISSN: 1480-9222 Impact factor: 3.244
Fig. 1Dynamics of EV and VM formation during tumor development. a Representative images of H22 tumor tissues. b, c Comparison of spatial differentiation between endothelial vessels and vasculogenic mimicry under CD31 immunohistochemistry-PAS double staining (200×). d Endothelial vessels and vasculogenic mimicry density after tumor inoculation. e, f Dynamics of body weight change and tumor growth after tumor inoculation. Data were represented as mean ± S.D. n = 40
Fig. 2Representative pictures of CD31 immunohistochemistry-PAS double staining and contrastive analysis between EV and VM. a EV was positive for CD31 and PAS, whereas VM was negative for CD31 but positive for PAS. EV was labelled by black box and VM was marked by red box. b EV density was obviously more than VM density per 200× field. Data were represented as mean ± S.D. n = 40. c The connection between EV and VM was distinctly observed under CD31-PAS double staining (400×). EV was labelled by black box and VM was marked by red box. d Schematic drawing of VM and EV in two dimensional plane. When blood flows through smaller EV and bigger VM, there may be a switch between laminar flow and turbulent flow. e Comparison of vascular diameter between EV and VM under CD31-PAS double staining (400×). f The vascular diameter of VM was four times bigger than that of EV. Data were represented as mean ± S.D.
Fig. 3Pearson correlation test between EV or VM density and quantitive parameters of CEUS. a A representative CEUS image along with the corresponding CD31-PAS double staining image. b EV density positively correlated to the maximal intensity (IMAX) (r = 0.4519, P = 0.0034). n = 40. c VM density positively correlated to the rise time (RT) (r = 0.3598, P = 0.0226). n = 40. d VM density positively correlated to the time to peak (TTP) (r = 0.3733, P = 0.0177). n = 40. e VM density positively correlated to the mean transit time (mTT) (r = 0.6483, P < 0.0001). n = 40
Correlation between EV density and quantitive parameters of CEUS at time intensity curve
| EV density and IMAX | EV density and RT | EV density and TTP | EV density and mTT | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 0.4519 | −0.1125 | −0.0559 | − 0.1219 |
|
| 0.0034 | 0.4896 | 0.7319 | 0.4535 |
P-values less than 0.05 were considered to be statistically significant. n = 40
Correlation between VM density and quantitive parameters of CEUS at time intensity curve
| VM density and IMAX | VM density and RT | VM density and TTP | VM density and mTT | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 0.0178 | 0.3598 | 0.3733 | 0.6483 |
|
| 0.9130 | 0.0226 | 0.0177 | < 0.0001 |
P-values less than 0.05 were considered to be statistically significant. n = 40