Oku T, Tjuvajev J G, Miyagawa T, Sasajima T, Joshi A, Joshi R, Finn R, Claffey K P, Blasberg R G
Department of Neurology, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York, New York 10021, USA.
Cancer Res. 1998 Sep 15;58(18):4185-92.
Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), also known as vascular permeability factor, has been investigated as a potent mediator of brain tumor angiogenesis and tumor growth. We evaluated the effect of VEGF expression on the pathophysiology of tumor growth in the brain. Human SK-MEL-2 melanoma cells, with minimal VEGF expression, were stably transfected with either sense or antisense mouse VEGF cDNA and used to produce intracerebral xenografts. Vascular permeability, blood volume, blood flow, and tumor fluorodeoxyglucose metabolism were assessed using tissue sampling and quantitative autoradiography. Tumor proliferation was assessed by measuring bromodeoxyuridine labeling indices. Tumor vascular density and morphological status of the blood-brain barrier were evaluated by immunohistochemistry. SK-MEL-2 cells transfected with sense VEGF (V+) expressed large amounts of mouse and human VEGF protein; V+ cells formed well-vascularized, rapidly growing tumors with minimal tumor necrosis. V+ tumors had substantial and significant increases in blood volume, blood flow, vascular permeability, and fluorodeoxyglucose metabolism compared to wild-type and/or V- (antisense VEGF) tumors. VEGF antisense transfected V- expressed no detectable VEGF protein and formed minimally vascularized tumors. V- tumors had a very low initial growth rate with central necrosis; blood volume, blood flow, vascular permeability, and glucose metabolism levels were low compared to wild-type and V+ tumors. A substantial inhibition of intracerebral tumor growth, as well as a decrease in tumor vascularity, blood flow, and vascular permeability may be achieved by down-regulation of endogenous VEGF expression in tumor tissue. VEGF-targeted antiangiogenic gene therapy could be an effective component of a combined strategy to treat VEGF-producing brain tumors.
血管内皮生长因子(VEGF),也被称为血管通透因子,已被作为脑肿瘤血管生成和肿瘤生长的一种强效介质进行研究。我们评估了VEGF表达对脑肿瘤生长病理生理学的影响。将VEGF表达极低的人SK-MEL-2黑色素瘤细胞用有义或反义小鼠VEGF cDNA进行稳定转染,并用于产生脑内异种移植瘤。使用组织采样和定量放射自显影评估血管通透性、血容量、血流和肿瘤氟脱氧葡萄糖代谢。通过测量溴脱氧尿苷标记指数评估肿瘤增殖。通过免疫组织化学评估肿瘤血管密度和血脑屏障的形态状态。用有义VEGF转染的SK-MEL-2细胞(V+)表达大量小鼠和人VEGF蛋白;V+细胞形成血管化良好、生长迅速且肿瘤坏死极少的肿瘤。与野生型和/或V-(反义VEGF)肿瘤相比,V+肿瘤的血容量、血流、血管通透性和氟脱氧葡萄糖代谢有显著且实质性的增加。VEGF反义转染的V-不表达可检测到的VEGF蛋白,并形成血管化极少的肿瘤。V-肿瘤的初始生长速率非常低,伴有中央坏死;与野生型和V+肿瘤相比,血容量、血流、血管通透性和葡萄糖代谢水平较低。通过下调肿瘤组织中内源性VEGF表达,可实现对脑内肿瘤生长的显著抑制,以及肿瘤血管生成、血流和血管通透性的降低。以VEGF为靶点的抗血管生成基因治疗可能是治疗产生VEGF的脑肿瘤联合策略的一个有效组成部分。