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PhD program Molecular Signal Tranduction TUMOR ANGIOGENESIS Erhard Hofer Department of Vascular Biology and Thrombosis Research Center for Biomolecular Medicine and Pharmacology Medical University of Vienna Part I: Overview of vessel formation 1- Angiogenesis and vasculogenesis 2- Important factors and receptors 3- VEGF receptor signaling 4- Tumor angiogenesis 5- Anti-angiogenesis therapies Literature: Books: B. Alberts et al., Molecular Biology of the Cell, 5th Edition, Taylor and Francis Inc., 2007 Pg. 1279-1283 R.A. Weinberg, The Biology of Cancer, Garland Science, 2007 Pg. 556-585 Tumor Angiogenesis - Basic mechanisms and Cancer Therapy, D. Marme, N. Fusenig, ed. Springer Verlag 2008 Angiogenesis - From basic science to clinical application N. Ferrara, ed. CRC Press, Taylor&Francis Group, 2007 Literature: Reviews: Nature Insight Angiogenesis G.D. Yancopoulos et al. (2000). Vascular-specific growth factors and blood vessel formation. Nature 407, 242-248. Angiogenesis Focus, Nature Med 9, June 2003 Peter Carmeliet, Angiogenesis in Health and Disease Napoleone Ferrara et al., The biology of VEGF and its receptors Rakesh K. Jain, Molecular regulation of vessel maturation Shanin Rafii and David Lyden, Therapeutic stem and progenitor cell transplantation for organ vascularization and regeneration Christopher W. Pugh and Peter J. Ratcliffe, Regulation of angiogenesis by hypoxia: role of the HIF system Angiogenesis, Nature Reviews Cancer 3, June 2003 Gabriele Bergers and Laura E. Benjamin, Tumorigenesis and the angiogenic switch C.J. Schofield and P.J. Ratcliffe. Oxygen sensing by HIF hydroxylases. Nature Rev. Mol. Cell Biol. 5, 343-354 (2004) Nature Insight Angiogenesis, Vol. 438, pg. 931-974, December 2005 Carmeliet, Angiogenesis in life, disease and medicine Coultas, Endothelial cells and VEGF in vascular development Alitalo, Lymphangiogenesis in development and human disease Greenberg, From angiogenesis to neuropathology Gariano, Retinal angiogenesis in development and disease Ferrara, Angiogenesis as a therapeutic target P. Carmeliet and M. Tessier-Lavigne, Common mechanisms of nerve and blood vessel wiring, Nature 436, 195-200 (2005) J. Folkman, Angiogenesis: an organizing principle for drug discovery ? Nature Reviews Drug Discovery 6, 273-286 (2007) Role of notch: Adams and Alitalo, Molecular regulation of angiogenesis and lymphangiogenesis, Nature Rev Mol Cell Biol 8, 464-478 (2007) Germain et al., Hypoxia-driven angiogenesis, Curr Opinion in Hematol 17 (2010) Guidance cues: Larrivee et al., Guidance of vascular development: Lessons from the nervous system, Circulation Research 104, 428-441 (2009) Gaur et al., Role of class 3 semaphorins and their receptors in tumor growth and angiogenesis, Clin Cancer Res 15, 6763-70 (2009) Unterlagen: http://mailbox.univie.ac.at/erhard.hofer Student point, Vorlesungsunterlagen [email protected] Structure of vessels and capillaries Small artery: Monocellular layer of endothelial cells Capillary: endothelial cell, basal lamina, pericytes Angiogenesis: Sprouting of cells from mature endothelial cells of the vessel wall (secretion of proteases, resolution of Basal lamina, migration towards Chemotactic gradient, proliferation, Tube formation) VEGF is factor largely specific for endothelial cells, bFGF can also induce, not specific for EC) Mouse cornea: wounding induces angiogenesis, chemotactic response to angiogenic factors Sprouting towards chemotactic gradient: VEGF Hypoxia - HIF - VEGF every cell must be within 50 to 100 mm of a capillary HIF: hypoxia inducible factor VEGF: vascular endothelial growth factor Von Hippel-Lindau Tumor Suppressor, HIF and VEGF VEGF-gene: Regulated by HIF, HIF is continously produced, ubiquitinylated, degraded in proteasome, therefore low concentration; Ubiquitinylation dependent on Hippel-Lindau tumor suppressor (part of an E3 ubiquitin-ligase complex) HIF1a is modified by a prolyl hydroxylase, then better interaction with vHL protein, high turnover; Hydroxylase is regulated by O2 capillaries sprouting in the retina of an embryonic mouse capillary lumen opening up behind the tip cell (red dye injected) Vasculogenesis Formation of vessels by differentiation of cells from angioblasts in the yolk sac of the embryo: Is differentiation and proliferation of endothelial cells in a non-vascularized tissue Leads to formation of a primitive tubular network Has to undergo angiogenic remodeling to stable vascular system Postnatal vasculogenesis Hemangioblast Angioblast EC Factors and receptors Endothelium-specific factors: VEGF family: 5 factors Angiopoietin family : 4 factors Ephrin family : at least 1 factor Non EC-specific factors : bFGF PDGF TGF-b VEGF/VEGFR family VEGF/VEGFR: VEGF-A: initiation of vasculogenesis and sprouting angiogenesis, Immature vessels, Vascular permeability factor, Haploid insufficiency in k.o. mice, PlGF: remodeling of adult vessels VEGF-B: heart vascularization ? VEGF-C: lymphatic vessels VEGF-D: lymphatic vessels ? VEGFR-2: growth and permeability VEGFR-1: negative role ?, decoy receptor, synergism with VEGFR-2 in tumor angiogenesis VEGFR-3: lymphatic vessels Network of lymphatic vessels (red) and capillaries (green): Lymphatic vessels are larger, not supported by underlying mural cells Figure 13.31 The Biology of Cancer (© Garland Science 2007) Differential signaling by tyr kinase receptors EC “specific” factors/receptors: VEGFR2 VEGFR1 VEGF-A, PLGF VEGFR2 VEGF-A VEGFR3 TIE1 TIE2 VEGF-C ? ANG1,2 Y799 Y820 P38, src (vascular leakage?) Y925 Y936 Y951 TSAd (migration) Y994 Y1006 Y1052 Y1057 PI-3 kinase (survival) Y1080 Y1104 gene regulation Y1128 Y1134 Y1175 Y1212 Y1221 Y1303 Y1307 Y1317 PLC-g proliferation vasculogenesis angiogenesis Sakurai et al. PNAS 2005 82 of the most strongly VEGFregulated genes (over 5-fold) compared to EGF and IL-1 induction VEGF + IL-1 cluster VEGF + EGF + IL-1 cluster VEGF + EGF cluster VEGF cluster Overlapping and specific gene repertoires of VEGF, EGF and IL-1 VEGF 20% EGF 20% IL-1 60% About 60 genes reproducibly induced by VEGF over 3-fold VEGF-induced genes overlap to a large degree with IL1-induced genes (50-60 %) 20 % of genes are preferentially induced by VEGF Signaling by receptors of endothelial cells IL-1 VEGF-A IL-1R EGF VEGFR-2 EGFR p38 P PLC-g MyD88 951 TsAd P P 1175 1175 PI3K IKKa/IKKb/IKKg Ca++ P Grb2 Actin cytoskeleton PKC Ras Akt IB NFB NFB Calcineurin NFAT EGR-1 EGR-1 gene regulation proliferation inflammation Raf MEK/ERK Raf MEK/ERK survival migration permeability angiogenesis Hofer E., Schweighofer B. Signaling transduction induced in endothelial cells by growth factor receptors involved in angiogenesis. Thrombosis ang haemostasis 2007 Guidance molecules in endothelial tip cell attraction and repulsion Carmeliet P, Nature. 2005 Eichmann A, Curr Opin Neurobiol. 2005 Angiopoietins und Tie Receptors: Ang1: remodeling and maturation Quiescence and stability Resistance to permeability, Supports interaction with other cells and matrix, Vessel size (VEGF number of vessels), Repair of damaged vessels Ang2: natural antagonist, Overexpression similar Ang-1 k.o. oder Tie-2 k.o., Destabilization signal for initiation of vascular remodeling Either regression or increased VEGF sensitivity Ang2 is induced in tumors Ang3: ? Ang4: ? Tie2: binds Ang1-4 Tie1: ? Ephrins und Eph-Receptors: Largest family of growth factor receptors, Relevant for vascular system: Ephrin B2/ Eph B4 : remodeling and maturation Different for early arterial (Ephrin B2) and venous vessels (EphB4), Hypothesis: role for fusion of arterial/ venous vessels Growth of tumor vessels 3-incorporation of BM-derived precursors 2-Intussusceptive growth 1-Sprouting 4-Cooption of existing vessels 5-Lymphangiogenesis Role of VEGF and Ang2 for tumor angiogenesis, VEGF-blockade is promising for anti-ngiogenesis therapy Concept 1: non-vascularized Tumor Concept 2: many tumors “home in” onto vessels, occupate existing vessels, Vessel produces Ang2, first tumor regression, then VEGF production by tumor Recruitment of capillaries by an implanted tumor Figure 13.32a The Biology of Cancer (© Garland Science 2007) Chaotic organization of tumor-associated vasculature Figure 13.34a The Biology of Cancer (© Garland Science 2007) Structure and function of tumor vessels: Chaotic architecture and blood flow Therefore hypoxic and acidic regions in tumor Permeability strongly increased fenestrae enlarged Junctions No functional lymphatics inside the tumor enlarged in surrounding, increases metastasis Mosaic vessels Abnormale endothelium Tumor vessel is only partially overlaid by pericytes and SMC Figure 13.33 The Biology of Cancer (© Garland Science 2007) The Rip-Tag model of islet tumor cell progression Transgene: SV40 large and small T transcription driven by insulin promoter Transcription in b-cells of islets of Langerhans Figure 13.37 The Biology of Cancer (© Garland Science 2007) The angiogenic switch and recruitment of inflammatory cells Figure 13.38b The Biology of Cancer (© Garland Science 2007) Heterotypic interactions as targets for therapeutic intervention Figure 13.49 The Biology of Cancer (© Garland Science 2007) Inhibition of tumor angiogenesis (Combination with 5-fluorouracil for colorectal cancer) 1-Bevacizumab 2-VEGF-trap 3-Pegaptinib (Macular degeneration) 4 6- downstream Signals ? 5- SU11248 Bay43-9006 Bevacizumab Colorectal cancer Phase III Combination therapy Hurwitz et al. 2004 Mass et al. 2004 IFL: Irinotecan 5-fluorouracil Leucovorin Median survival benefit of two trials (2004): 3.7-4.7 months Gentherapien: rAdenoviren rRetroviren Targeting of viruses to tumors, tumor endothelium Targeting of liposomes to tumors, tumor endothelium Oncolytic viruses BM progenitor cells home to tumor vasculature Next meeting in Zürich, June 15-18, 2011 organized by Michael Detmar, ETH Ralf Adams, Max-Planck-Institute, Müns ter, Ger many Kari Alitalo, University of Helsinki, Finland Hirofumi Arakawa, National Cancer Center Research In stitute, Tokyo, Japan Hellmut Augustin, German Cancer Research Center, Heidelberg, Germany Roy Bicknell, University of Birmingha m, UK Georg Breier, Technical University Dresden, Germany Peter Carmeliet, Catholic University of Leuven, Belgium Michael Detmar, Swiss Federal Inst itute of Techno logy Zur ich, Switzerland Anna Dimberg, Uppsala University, Sweden Anne Eichmann, INSERM U833, College de France, Paris, France Britta Engelhardt, University of Bern, Switze rland Napoleone Ferrara, Genentech Inc ., San Francisco, USA Holger Gerhardt, London Research Institute, Cancer Research UK Dontscho Kerjaschki, Medical University of V ienna, Austria Alexander Koch, Gene ntech In c., San Francisco, USA Donald McDonald, University of California, San Francisco, USA Gera Neufeld, Israel Inst itute of Technology, Ha ifa, Israe l Jaques Pouyssegur, Inst itute of Developmental Biology and Cancer, Nice, France Masabumi Shibuya, University of Tokyo, Japan Dietmar Vestweber, Max-Planck-Institute, Münster, Germany