| Literature DB >> 31679081 |
Giorgio Seano1, Rakesh K Jain2.
Abstract
Vessel co-option is the movement of cancer cells towards and along the pre-existing vasculature and is an alternative to angiogenesis to gain access to nutrients. Vessel co-option has been shown as a strategy employed by some glioblastoma (GBM) cells to invade further into the brain, leading to one of the greatest challenges in treating GBM. In GBM, vessel co-option may be an intrinsic feature or an acquired mechanism of resistance to anti-angiogenic treatment. Here, we describe the histological features and the dynamics visualized through intravital microscopy of vessel co-option in GBM, as well as the molecular players discovered until now. We also highlight key unanswered questions, as answering these is critical to improve understanding of GBM progression and for developing more effective approaches for GBM treatment.Entities:
Keywords: Anti-angiogenesis; Cell migration; Glioblastoma; Tumor microenvironment; Vessel co-option
Year: 2019 PMID: 31679081 PMCID: PMC7012982 DOI: 10.1007/s10456-019-09691-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Angiogenesis ISSN: 0969-6970 Impact factor: 9.596
Fig. 1Strategies used by GBM for infiltration into the surrounding brain tissue. Collective invasion of the surrounding tissue, perivascular migration (also called as vessel co-option), peri-neuronal satellitosis, and individual-cell migration within the extracellular matrix (diffuse infiltration)
Fig. 2Intravital microscopy of GBM vessel co-option dynamics. Time-lapse imaging demonstrating that GBM cells move towards and then along the pre-existing blood vessels, maintaining very close contact.
Reproduced and adapted from [25]
Vessel co-option pathways in GBMs
| Pathways | Experimental model | Notes | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bradykinin | Patient-derived D54 in vivo model and in vitro co-culture | Bradykinin is released from blood vessels, while GBM cells express B2R, their inhibition impairs vessel co-option | [ |
| CXCR4/SDF1α | Gl261 mouse in vivo model and in vitro co-culture | SDF1α is expressed in neuronal and endothelial cells, while GBM cells express CXCR4, their inhibition impairs vessel co-option and radiosensitizes tumors | [ |
| Ang-2 | C6 rat in vivo model | Ang-2 and VEGF are expressed in vessel co-option areas as a consequence of vascular regression | [ |
| IL-8 | In vitro co-culture and in vivo implants | Endothelial cells increase GBM invasiveness and tumor growth through IL-8-mediated enrichment of glioma stem cells | [ |
| EGFRvIII | Mouse in vivo model and ex vivo brain slice | EGFRvIII-hi GBM cells are highly vessel co-opting and tumors originated by them are highly infiltrative and aggressive | [ |
| MDGI/FABP3 | Mouse in vivo model and ex vivo brain slice | Modulation of MDGI/FABP3 strongly alters the GBM cells’ ability of infiltrating the surrounding brain tissue with perivascular migration | [ |
| IRE-1α | Neurospheres and U87 in vivo models | Inhibition of IRE-1α increases vessel co-option and decreases pro-angiogenic pathways | [ |
| CDC42 | Ex vivo brain slice | Vessel co-opting GBM cells co-opt and interact with pericytes in a CDC42-dependent manner | [ |
| EphrinB2 | Patient-derived MGG8 in vivo model, syngeneic model and in vitro co-culture | Endothelial Ephrin-B2 regulates vessel co-option, when, and only if, the ligand Ephrin-B2 is upregulated in GBM cells | [ |
| Olig2/Wnt7a | Patient-derived MGG8 in vivo model, EGFRvIII-induced syngeneic model and ex vivo brain slice | Olig2-Wnt7 axis drives individual vessel co-option in oligodendrocyte-like GBM cells, its inhibition impairs vessel co-option and chemosensitizes tumors | [ |
CXCR4 CXC receptor-4, SDF1α stromal cell-derived factor-1α, IL-8 interleukin 8, Ang-2 angiopoietin 2, CDC42 cell division control protein 42, EGFRvIII epidermal growth factor receptor variant III, MDGI/FABP3 mammary-derived growth inhibitor (MDGI)/fatty acid binding protein 3, IRE1α inositol-requiring enzyme (IRE)-1α, Wnt is acronym of homologous wingless (wg) and Int-1, Olig2 oligodendrocyte transcription factor
Fig. 3Individual versus collective-cell vessel co-option. GBMs with a prevalent collective-cell vessel co-option are probably mainly composed of astrocyte-like GBM cells. These tumors show disruption astrocyte-vascular coupling and BBB, with a consequent blood vessel leakage and abnormal vasculature (large lumen and tortuous architecture), inflammation caused by vessel leakage and an increase of angiogenic stimuli. While GBMs with more individual-cell vessel co-option are composed of a prevalence of OPC-like GBM cells. These tumors are characterized by a much more subtle infiltration of the surrounding tissue, with no inflammation and vascular leakage