Abstract

Features that distinguish tumor vasculatures from normal blood vessels are sought to enable the destruction of preformed tumor vessels. We show that blood vessels in both a xenografted tumor and primary human tumors contain a sizable fraction of immature blood vessels that have not yet recruited periendothelial cells. These immature vessels are selectively obliterated as a consequence of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) withdrawal. In a xenografted glioma, the selective vulnerability of immature vessels to VEGF loss was demonstrated by downregulating VEGF transgene expression using a tetracycline-regulated expression system. In human prostate cancer, the constitutive production of VEGF by the glandular epithelium was suppressed as a consequence of androgen-ablation therapy. VEGF loss led, in turn, to selective apoptosis of endothelial cells in vessels devoid of periendothelial cells. These results suggest that the unique dependence on VEGF of blood vessels lacking periendothelial cells can be exploited to reduce an existing tumor vasculature.

Keywords

Vascular endothelial growth factorBlood vesselPathologyBiologyAngiogenesisCancer researchVascular endothelial growth factor AVEGF receptorsMedicineEndocrinology

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Publication Info

Year
1999
Type
article
Volume
103
Issue
2
Pages
159-165
Citations
1240
Access
Closed

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Laura E. Benjamin, Dragan Golijanin, Ahuva Itin et al. (1999). Selective ablation of immature blood vessels in established human tumors follows vascular endothelial growth factor withdrawal. Journal of Clinical Investigation , 103 (2) , 159-165. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci5028

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DOI
10.1172/jci5028