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02/15/05 --
Research led by investigators at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC)
helps explain how a group of angiogenesis inhibitor molecules serve as an
important defense mechanism against the development and spread of cancer,
offering key insights into why cancerous tumors grow at different rates
among different individuals.
The findings, which could
help lead to the development of new drug treatments to help keep existing
tumors at bay, are reported in the early edition of the Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) and in the Feb. 22 edition of the
publication.
Angiogenesis, the process by
which new blood vessels are derived from preexisting capillaries, is
considered essential for tumor growth. The "angiogenic switch" is turned on
when levels of angiogenesis stimulator molecules (VEGF, bFGF) exceed those
of angiogenesis inhibitor molecules. These proteins -- which include
tumstatin, endostatin and thrombospondin-1 -- are naturally present in body
fluids or tissues, providing a counterbalance to the stimulator molecules.
Earlier studies by the
paper's senior author Raghu Kalluri, PhD, published in Science and Cancer
Cell in 2002 and 2003, respectively, helped to explain the mechanisms by
which tumstatin and endostatin prevent the growth of new blood vessels.
Based on these earlier
findings, and coupled with two separate clinical observations -- that Down
syndrome patients have a significantly smaller incidence of cancer than the
population-at-large and that nonsymptomatic microscopic tumors exist in the
organs of healthy individuals -- Kalluri hypothesized that angiogenic
inhibitor molecules were acting as tumor suppressors to control the rate of
cancer progression.
"For several decades now,
autopsies have shown that many people [between ages 40 and 50] who have died
of trauma [i.e. automobile accidents, suicide] have tiny dormant tumors in
one or more of their organs, though only one percent have been diagnosed
with cancer," explains Kalluri, who is the director of the Center for Matrix
Biology at BIDMC and Associate Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical
School. "Our goal in this research was to find out if naturally occurring
proteins were preventing the recruitment of new blood vessels into the
tumors, and thereby keeping the tiny dormant tumors from developing into
large malignant tumors. We wanted to better understand the important guards
and checkpoints that our bodies possess."
To test the hypothesis that
angiogenesis inhibitor molecules were responsible for reining in tumor
growth, Kalluri and his colleagues studied the proteins tumstatin,
endostatin and thrombospondin-1, natural inhibitors of angiogenesis found in
blood, urine and tissues throughout the body. The authors created mice
genetically deleted in each of these proteins to help ascertain their normal
function in tumor growth.
Their results showed when any
one of these inhibitors was removed from the mice, tumors grew at a rate two
to three times faster when compared with normal mice. "But even more
significant," notes Kalluri, "we found that when two of the inhibitor
proteins were simultaneously removed, the tumors grew faster still,
suggesting that the body's own natural capacity to guard against cancer
progression plays a role equally as important as genetic defects of cancer
cells in whether or not tumors grow and spread."
To demonstrate therapeutic
possibilities, the researchers then developed a transgenic mouse that
overproduced the endostatin protein in quantities that mimicked Down
syndrome patients (a 1.6-fold increase over normal) who, due to an extra
copy of chromosome 21, have elevated levels of the protein. As predicted,
tumors in this group of mice grew three times more slowly than did tumors in
normal mice.
"The evidence that tumor
angiogenesis is controlled by endogenous proteins has been accumulating over
the past decade, but has depended largely on the use of these molecules that
are introduced into tumor-bearing mice," notes Robert Weinberg, PhD, of the
Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research and the Department of Biology at
the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). "The real question has
been, however, whether the tissues of the tumor-bearing mouse [and by
extension, a human] produce these agents in quantities that truly affect
tumor growth. With this paper, we have compelling evidence that a number of
these molecules, when produced by the mouse's own tissues, are able to act
to constrain blood vessel growth in the tumors -- the final piece of proof
needed to demonstrate their importance in preventing the outgrowth of
tumors."
"These
mice [in the Kalluri study] are the first animals to mimic the protection
against cancer which is afforded
individuals with Down
syndrome who also have a similar increase in endostatin in their blood, and
are the most protected against cancer of all humans," adds Judah Folkman,
MD, Director of the Vascular Biology Program at Children's Hospital Boston
whose laboratory first proposed the angiogenesis paradigm more than 30 years
ago.
"This is a landmark paper
because it provides genetic proof that endogenous inhibitors of angiogenesis
circulating in the blood may protect us from the disease of cancer and is
the first demonstration that a mild increase in one of the circulating
angiogenesis inhibitors, endostatin, confers protection against cancer in
mice, i.e. reduces the growth rate of tumors by 300 percent," Folkman adds.
"Between nine and 10 million
people worldwide die of cancer each year," says Kalluri. "While a lot has
been learned of how genetic defects convert normal cells into cancerous
cells, much less is known about how the body defends itself against the
growth of cancer. Our study helps provide a glimpse into what may be
happening. The hope is that this new understanding of cancer growth can
eventually lead to the use of these natural proteins as therapies to treat
cancer at an early stage, before it becomes a devastating disease."
Source: Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center
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