학술논문

Distinct profile of vascular progenitor attachment to extracellular matrix proteins in cancer patients.
Document Type
Article
Source
Clinical & Investigative Medicine. Apr2012, Vol. 35 Issue 2, pE86-E95. 10p. 1 Color Photograph, 1 Chart, 3 Graphs.
Subject
*EXTRACELLULAR matrix proteins
*CANCER patients
*PROGENITOR cells
*NEOVASCULARIZATION
*METASTASIS
*CANCER cells
Language
ISSN
0147-958X
Abstract
Background: Vascular progenitor cells (VPCs) facilitate angiogenesis and initiate vascular repair by homing in on sites of damage and adhering to extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins. VPCs also contribute to tumor angiogenesis and induce angiogenic switching in sites of metastatic cancer. In this study, the binding of attaching cells in VPC clusters that form in vitro on specific ECM proteins was investigated. Methods: VPC cluster assays were performed in vitro on ECM proteins enriched in cancer cells and in remodelling tissue. Profiles of VPC clusters from patients with cancer were compared to healthy controls. Profile of VEGF and integrin-specific binding of angiogenic attaching cells was addressed. Results: VPC clusters from cancer patients were markedly increased on fibronectin relative to other ECM proteins tested, in contrast to VPC clusters from control subjects, which formed preferentially on laminin. Specific integrin-mediated binding of attaching cells in VPC clusters was matrix protein-dependent. Furthermore, cancer patients had elevated plasma VEGF levels compared to healthy controls and VEGF facilitated preferential VPC cluster formation on fibronectin. Incubating cells from healthy controls with VEGF induced a switch from the ‘healthy’ VPC binding profile to the profile observed in cancer patients with a marked increase in VPC cluster formation on fibronectin. Conclusion: The ECM proteins laminin and fibronectin support VPC cluster formation via specific integrins on attaching cells and can facilitate patterns of VPC cluster formation that are distinct in cancer patients. Larger studies, however, are needed to gain insight on how tumor angiogenesis may differ from normal repair processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]