| Literature DB >> 31772665 |
Xue Zhang1, Jigang Zhang1, Heming Zhou1, Guorong Fan1, Qin Li1.
Abstract
Vasculogenic mimicry (VM) is a vascular formation mechanism used by aggressive tumor cells. VM provides an alternative pathway for adequate blood perfusion and challenges the traditional angiogenesis mechanism that depends only on endothelial cells (ECs), as VM-forming tumor cells express a mixed endothelial/tumor phenotype. VM is closely correlated with tumor invasion, migration, and progression. Hence, anticancer therapeutic strategies targeting VM biogenesis are essential. It is widely acknowledged that the VM formation mechanism involves multiple pathways. The purpose of this review is to describe the potential molecular mechanisms related to different pathways and discuss the involvement of microRNAs (miRNAs), long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs), and circular RNAs (circRNAs) in VM formation. Moreover, we discuss the significance of VM in clinical practice and present new anticancer therapeutic strategies that target VM. © The author(s).Entities:
Keywords: circRNAs; lncRNAs; miRNAs; molecular mechanisms; vasculogenic mimicry
Year: 2019 PMID: 31772665 PMCID: PMC6856738 DOI: 10.7150/jca.34171
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cancer ISSN: 1837-9664 Impact factor: 4.207
Figure 1Schematic illustration showing the three microcirculation patterns associated with VM. In the early stages, VM play a major role in providing blood supply. With the increase of tumor size, tumor cells lining the wall of VM vessels are replaced by endothelium. MVs is the transitional state between EVs and VM. Finally, EVs become the major pattern of blood supply.
Figure 2Schematic illustration showing the involvement of CSCs and EMT in VM formation. VM: vasculogenic mimicry; CSCs: cancer stem cells; EMT: epithelial-mesenchymal transition.
Figure 3Schematic model of a molecular mechanisms implicated in tumor cell VM. (1) Tumor microenvironment components, including MMP-2 and MMP-14, facilitate the cleavage of Ln5γ2 into γ2 and γ2' fragments to contribute to ECM remodeling in VM. (2) PI3K, ERK1/2 and AKT are in intermediate signaling pathways that can influence the tumor microenvironment and take part in the process of VM formation through the VE-cadherin/EphA2/FAK/ERK1/2, VEGF-A/VEGFR1/PI3K/PKCα, COX-2/PEG2/EP3/PKCα/ERK1/2, and CDK5/FAK/AKT axis. (3) Nodal regulates VM formation by binding to cripto-1, ALK4/5/7 and ACTR-IIB, and then phosphorylating SMAD2/3, which translocates to the nucleus where it mediates gene expression. (4) HIF-1 induced by hypoxia directly regulates the gene expression of VEGF-A, VEGFR, EphA2, Twist, COX-2, OPN, LOXL2, MIF, and CXCL4. The hypoxia-induced regulation of Nodal expression occurs via a combinatorial mechanism that mediates HIF-1α and stabilizes the Notch protein NICD, activating Notch signaling.
MiRNA, lncRNA and CircRNA involved in VM.
| Genes | Targets | Effects on VM | Cancer Type | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| miRNA | Hsa-miR-299-5p | OPN | Promote | Breast cancer | |
| MiR-26b | EphA2 | Suppress | Glioma | ||
| MiR-200a | EphA2 | Suppress | Ovarian cancer | ||
| MiR-1236 | PTEN/PI3K/AKT | Suppress | HCC | ||
| MiR-124 | UHRF1, MMP-2, MMP9, VEGF AmotL1 | Suppress | Bladder cancer | ||
| MiR186 | Twist1 | Suppress | Prostate cancer | ||
| MiR-158-3p | ROCK1 | Suppress | Glioma | ||
| MiR-193b | DDAH1 | Suppress | Breast cancer | ||
| MiR-9 | STMN1 | Suppress | Glioma | ||
| MiR-Let-7f | POSTN | Suppress | Glioma | ||
| MiR-27a-3p | Twist1, VE-cadherin | Suppress | HCC | ||
| MiR-27b | VE-cadherin | Suppress | Ovarian cancer | ||
| MiR-101 | TGF-β, SDF1 | Suppress | HCC | ||
| MiR-204 | PI3K/AKT, RAF1/MAPK, VEGF, and FAK/SRC | promote | Breast cancer | ||
| MiR-765 | VEGFA/AKT1/SRC-α | Suppress | Ovarian cancer | ||
| MiR-125a | IL-6 | Suppress | breast cancer | ||
| lncRNA | MALAT1 | VE-cadherin, β-catenin, MMPs, p-ERK, p-FAK, p-paxillin | Promote | Gastric cancer | |
| miR145-5p/NEDD9 | Promote | Non-small cell lung cancer | |||
| LNC00339 | miR-539-5p/TWIST1/MMPs | Promote | Glioma | ||
| HOXA-AS2 | miR-373, EGFR | Suppress | Glioma | ||
| LNC00312 | YBX1 | Promote | lung adenocarcinoma | ||
| lncRNAn340532 | TGF-β | Promote | Osteosarcoma | ||
| CircRNA | cZNF292 | hypoxia | Promote | HCC |
Identification methods of VM
| Identification methods | Cancer Type | References |
|---|---|---|
| IHC | Non-functioning Pituitary Adenomas | |
| Intracranial hemangiopericytoma | ||
| MRI | Breast cancer | |
| Gliomas | ||
| Doppler imaging | Melanoma | |
| Confocal Indocyanine Green Angiography | Uveal Melanoma |
Therapeutic agents targeting VM
| Therapeutic agents | Molecular targets or function | Cancer Type | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cilengitide | αvβ5 integrins,VEGFR-2, NRP-1 | Melanoma | |
| Doxycycline | EMT inhibition | HCC | |
| Curcumin | STAT3, PI3K/AKT | HCC | |
| JAK-2/STAT-3 | Laryngeal squamous cell carcinoma | ||
| Galunisertib | Astrocytes, SMα, Akt,Flk | Glioma | |
| Verteporfin | MMP-2,VE-cadherin, | Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma | |
| Norcantharidin | PI3K, MMP-2, | Gallbladder carcinoma, melanoma | |
| Niclosamide | VEGFA, MMP-2, ROCK1, Cdc42, STAT3, MiR-124 | Oral cancer | |
| Hinokitiol | EGFR | Breast cancer | |
| Paris polyphylla | FAK, Mig-7, | Osteosarcoma | |
| Triptonide | VE-cadherin, CXCL2 | Pancreatic cancer | |
| Celastrus orbiculatus extract | Notch1, Hes1 | HCC | |
| Luteolin | Notch1-VEGF | Gastric cancer | |
| Polyphyllin I | PI3k-Akt-Twist1-VE-cadherin | HCC | |
| KVEPQDPSEW | MMPs , VEGF AKT/mTOR | Fibrosarcoma | |
| JQ1 | ERK1/2-MMP2/9 | Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma | |
| SCH772984 | ERK1/2 | Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma | |
| Ethoxy‐erianin phosphate | MMP‐2, MMP‐9, and STAT3 | 2,3‐dioxygenase -induced Lewis lung cancer | |
| Incarvine C | ROCK | HCC |