Matsumoto Shingo, Saito Keita, Takakusagi Yoichi, Matsuo Masayuki, Munasinghe Jeeva P, Morris Herman D, Lizak Martin J, Merkle Hellmut, Yasukawa Keiji, Devasahayam Nallathamby, Suburamanian Sankaran, Mitchell James B, Krishna Murali C
1 Radiation Biology Branch, Center for Cancer Research, National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health , Bethesda, Maryland.
Antioxid Redox Signal. 2014 Sep 10;21(8):1145-55. doi: 10.1089/ars.2013.5725. Epub 2014 Apr 7.
The tumor microenvironment is characterized by a highly reducing redox status, a low pH, and hypoxia. Anti-angiogenic therapies for solid tumors frequently function in two steps: the transient normalization of structurally and functionally aberrant tumor blood vessels with increased blood perfusion, followed by the pruning of tumor blood vessels and the resultant cessation of nutrients and oxygen delivery required for tumor growth. Conventional anatomic or vascular imaging is impractical or insufficient to distinguish between the two steps of tumor response to anti-angiogenic therapies. Here, we investigated whether the noninvasive imaging of the tumor redox state and energy metabolism could be used to characterize anti-angiogenic drug-induced transient vascular normalization.
Daily treatment of squamous cell carcinoma (SCCVII) tumor-bearing mice with the multi-tyrosine kinase inhibitor sunitinib resulted in a rapid decrease in tumor microvessel density and the suppression of tumor growth. Tumor pO2 imaging by electron paramagnetic resonance imaging showed a transient increase in tumor oxygenation after 2-4 days of sunitinib treatment, implying improved tumor perfusion. During this window of vascular normalization, magnetic resonance imaging of the redox status using an exogenously administered nitroxide probe and hyperpolarized (13)C MRI of the metabolic flux of pyruvate/lactate couple revealed an oxidative shift in tumor redox status.
Redox-sensitive metabolic couples can serve as noninvasive surrogate markers to identify the vascular normalization window in tumors with imaging techniques.
A multimodal imaging approach to characterize physiological, metabolic, and redox changes in tumors is useful to distinguish between the different stages of anti-angiogenic treatment.
肿瘤微环境的特征是氧化还原状态高度还原、pH值低和缺氧。实体瘤的抗血管生成疗法通常分两步发挥作用:结构和功能异常的肿瘤血管短暂正常化,同时血液灌注增加,随后肿瘤血管被修剪,肿瘤生长所需的营养物质和氧气供应随之停止。传统的解剖学或血管成像无法区分肿瘤对抗血管生成疗法反应的这两个步骤,或者不足以进行区分。在此,我们研究了肿瘤氧化还原状态和能量代谢的非侵入性成像是否可用于表征抗血管生成药物诱导的短暂血管正常化。
用多酪氨酸激酶抑制剂舒尼替尼每日治疗荷鳞状细胞癌(SCCVII)肿瘤的小鼠,导致肿瘤微血管密度迅速降低,并抑制肿瘤生长。通过电子顺磁共振成像进行的肿瘤pO2成像显示,舒尼替尼治疗2 - 4天后肿瘤氧合短暂增加,这意味着肿瘤灌注得到改善。在这个血管正常化的窗口期内,使用外源性给予的氮氧化物探针进行氧化还原状态的磁共振成像,以及对丙酮酸/乳酸代谢通量进行超极化(13)C磁共振成像,均显示肿瘤氧化还原状态发生氧化转变。
氧化还原敏感的代谢偶联物可作为非侵入性替代标志物,通过成像技术识别肿瘤中的血管正常化窗口。
一种用于表征肿瘤生理、代谢和氧化还原变化的多模态成像方法,有助于区分抗血管生成治疗的不同阶段。