Leukemia Research Unit, Jiangsu Institute of Hematology, 1st Affiliated Hospital, Soochow University, 188 Shizi Street, Suzhou 215006, PR China.
Med Hypotheses. 2011 May;76(5):618-21. doi: 10.1016/j.mehy.2010.12.001. Epub 2011 Mar 12.
Central nervous system (CNS) relapse remains an important cause of morbidity and mortality in acute leukemia, but the mechanisms of CNS infiltration are poorly understood. Some results have shown the blood-brain barrier (BBB) makes CNS become a refugee to leukemic cells and serves as a resource of cells that seed extraneural sites. The authors ask how can leukemic cells disrupt BBB and then successfully enter the CNS in the process of leukemia metastasis. Tight junctions between brain microvessel endothelial cells (BMECs) of BBB possess an intricate complex of transmembrane proteins with cytoplasmic accessory proteins, and hence act as physiological and pharmacological barrier, thereby preventing influx of molecules from the bloodstream into the brain. So the loss of endothelial tight-junction proteins might be an important event related to the disruption of BBB. Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) is one of the potent mediators of vascular permeability and the VEGF secreted by leukemic cells may be implicated in this response. Leukemic cells not only produce VEGF, but also express functional VEGFR, resulting in an autocrine loop for tumor growth and dissemination. It has been observed that forced VEGF over expression triggers proliferation and migration/invasion of some leukemic cells, thereby inducing a more invasive tumor phenotype. It has been identified that VEGF-mediated disruption of endothelial transmembrane tight-junction proteins is contributed to the breakdown of BBB in some CNS inflammation disease. Here, we hypothesize that VEGF secreted by leukemic cells also plays an important role in increasing the permeability of BBB by disrupting endothelial tight-junction proteins and give leukemic cells an entrance to the CNS in CNS leukemia. We propose the key tight-junction proteins claudin-5, occludin, and ZO-1 as targets of VEGF action in promoting BBB breakdown, and in interfering with the VEGF/VEGFR pathway using anti-VEGF or anti-VEGFR antibodies can reduce the permeability of BBB. All these will be tested on the BBB model in vitro and in vivo based on an animal model of CNS leukemia. This hypothesis is useful for exploring the mechanism of leukemic CNS infiltration. If correct, the mechanism put forward here will provide a potent evidence for anti-VEGF strategies in treatment of CNS leukemia.
中枢神经系统(CNS)复发仍然是急性白血病发病率和死亡率的重要原因,但 CNS 浸润的机制尚不清楚。一些研究结果表明,血脑屏障(BBB)使 CNS 成为白血病细胞的避难所,并成为播散到神经外部位的细胞来源。作者提出这样一个问题:在白血病转移过程中,白血病细胞如何破坏 BBB 并成功进入 CNS?BBB 脑微血管内皮细胞(BMEC)之间的紧密连接具有复杂的跨膜蛋白和细胞质辅助蛋白复合物,因此作为生理和药理学屏障,从而防止分子从血液流入大脑。因此,内皮紧密连接蛋白的丢失可能是与 BBB 破坏相关的重要事件。血管内皮生长因子(VEGF)是血管通透性的有力介质之一,白血病细胞分泌的 VEGF 可能与这种反应有关。白血病细胞不仅产生 VEGF,还表达功能性 VEGFR,导致肿瘤生长和扩散的自分泌环。已经观察到,强制过表达 VEGF 会触发一些白血病细胞的增殖和迁移/侵袭,从而诱导更具侵袭性的肿瘤表型。已经确定 VEGF 介导的内皮跨膜紧密连接蛋白的破坏有助于某些 CNS 炎症疾病中 BBB 的破裂。在这里,我们假设白血病细胞分泌的 VEGF 也通过破坏内皮紧密连接蛋白在增加 BBB 的通透性方面发挥重要作用,并为白血病细胞进入 CNS 白血病的 CNS 提供入口。我们提出紧密连接蛋白 claudin-5、occludin 和 ZO-1 作为 VEGF 作用促进 BBB 破裂的靶点,并使用抗 VEGF 或抗 VEGFR 抗体干扰 VEGF/VEGFR 通路,可以降低 BBB 的通透性。所有这些都将基于 CNS 白血病的动物模型在体外和体内的 BBB 模型上进行测试。该假设有助于探索白血病 CNS 浸润的机制。如果正确,这里提出的机制将为 CNS 白血病的抗 VEGF 策略提供有力证据。