Williams J I, Weitman S, Gonzalez C M, Jundt C H, Marty J, Stringer S D, Holroyd K J, Mclane M P, Chen Q, Zasloff M, Von Hoff D D
Magainin Pharmaceuticals Inc., Plymouth Meeting, Pennsylvania 19462, USA.
Clin Cancer Res. 2001 Mar;7(3):724-33.
Squalamine, an antiangiogenic aminosterol, is presently undergoing Phase II clinical trials in cancer patients. To broaden our understanding of the clinical potential for squalamine, this agent was evaluated in nu/nu mouse xenograft models using the chemoresistant MV-522 human non-small cell lung carcinoma and the SD human neuroblastoma lines. Squalamine was studied alone and in combination with either cisplatin or paclitaxel plus carboplatin. Squalamine alone produced a modest MV-522 tumor growth inhibition (TGI) and yielded a TGI with cisplatin that was better than cisplatin alone. Squalamine also significantly enhanced the activity of paclitaxel/carboplatin combination therapy in the MV-522 tumor model. Squalamine similarly improved the effectiveness of cisplatin in producing TGI when screened against the SD human neuroblastoma xenograft. Xenograft tumor shrinkage was seen for the MV-522 tumor in combination treatments including squalamine, whereas no tumor shrinkage was seen when squalamine was omitted from the treatment regimen. To gain a greater understanding of the mechanism by which squalamine inhibited tumor growth in the xenograft studies, in vitro experiments were carried out with vascular endothelial growth factor-stimulated human umbilical vein endothelial cells in culture exposed to squalamine. Squalamine treatment was found to retard two cellular events necessary for angiogenesis, inducing disorganization of F-actin stress fibers and causing a concomitant reduction of detectable cell the surface molecular endothelial cadherin (VE-cadherin). We propose that the augmentation by squalamine of cytotoxicity from platinum-based therapies is attributable to interference by squalamine with the ability of stimuli to promote endothelial cell movement and cell-cell communication necessary for growth of new blood vessels in xenografts after chemotherapeutic injury to the tumor.
角鲨胺是一种具有抗血管生成作用的氨基甾醇,目前正在癌症患者中进行II期临床试验。为了更深入了解角鲨胺的临床潜力,我们使用耐化疗的MV-522人非小细胞肺癌和SD人神经母细胞瘤细胞系,在裸鼠异种移植模型中对角鲨胺进行了评估。对角鲨胺进行了单独研究,并将其与顺铂或紫杉醇加卡铂联合使用。单独使用角鲨胺可适度抑制MV-522肿瘤生长(TGI),与顺铂联合使用时产生的TGI优于单独使用顺铂。在MV-522肿瘤模型中,角鲨胺还显著增强了紫杉醇/卡铂联合治疗的活性。当针对SD人神经母细胞瘤异种移植进行筛选时,角鲨胺同样提高了顺铂产生TGI的有效性。在包括角鲨胺的联合治疗中,MV-522肿瘤出现了异种移植瘤缩小,而在治疗方案中省略角鲨胺时则未观察到肿瘤缩小。为了更深入了解角鲨胺在异种移植研究中抑制肿瘤生长的机制,我们对培养的血管内皮生长因子刺激的人脐静脉内皮细胞进行了体外实验,使其暴露于角鲨胺。发现角鲨胺处理可延缓血管生成所需的两个细胞事件,诱导F-肌动蛋白应激纤维紊乱,并导致可检测到的细胞表面分子内皮钙黏蛋白(VE-钙黏蛋白)随之减少。我们认为,角鲨胺增强铂类疗法的细胞毒性是由于角鲨胺干扰了刺激物促进内皮细胞运动和细胞间通讯的能力,而这对于肿瘤化疗损伤后异种移植中新血管生长是必需的。