| May
2, 2005
Unexpected Lock and Key Mechanism Found
For the Assembly of Tumor Blood Vessels
By Leslie Franz
A critical lock
and key mechanism that allows the final step in the completion
of new blood vessel formation has been identified by a UCSD
School of Medicine team in research that promises to lead to
a new way to halt tumor growth by cutting off the tumor blood
supply.
The research team led
by Judith Varner, Associate Professor of Medicine at UCSD and
a member of the Rebecca and John Moores UCSD Cancer Center,
made the surprising discovery that a receptor-ligand pair previously
identified as key regulators of immune cell function puts the
finishing touches on newly constructed blood vessels by allowing
the two cell layers of blood vessels to recognize and “lock”
together.
The study, which appears
in the June 2005 issue of the Journal of Clinical Investigation,
is the first to show how the two cell layers of blood vessels
recognize and bind to each other during angiogenesis, which
is the formation of new blood vessels.
The work also could
yield new ways to diagnose and combat cancer. In fact, together
with Dr. Barbara Parker, UCSD Professor of Clinical Medicine
at the Moores UCSD Cancer Center, the researchers currently
are conducting tests with breast cancer patients to see if measuring
the activity of the receptor, or “lock,” called
integrin, could help diagnose the cancer earlier. They are also
currently planning cancer clinical trials with an FDA approved
drug directed against the integrin.
Angiogenesis has been
an intensely studied field of cancer research for the past 10
years. Since cancer cells literally hijack the body’s
normal angiogenesis process to initiate blood vessel growth
to fuel the growth of tumors, researchers believe that blocking
angiogenesis may choke off a tumor’s blood supply and
kill the cancerous cell.
Varner
and her team found that a specific integrin protein called a4b1
was produced at high levels in one part of a developing blood
vessel, the interior area called the endothelia. The integrin
was not produced in mature blood vessels, indicating a specific
role in developing vessels. The team found that the integrin
was produced in the endothelia of mouse and human blood vessels
that feed tumors such as colon cancer, melanoma and lung cancer.
Inhibitors of the integrin stopped new blood vessel growth and
suppressed tumor growth, indicating that the integrin helped
in the creation of tumors.

“Our study marks
the first time this integrin was found to play a key role in
angiogenesis,” said Varner. “This integrin is known
to regulate the body’s inflammation response, but until
this study it wasn’t suspected of regulating angiogenesis.
It’s possible that since the integrin only works on developing
blood vessels and in cancer, disrupting its ability to form
blood vessels could starve the tumor and stave off cancer.”
The research team discovered
that the integrin brought the endothelia, the inside part of
a blood vessel, together to bind with vascular smooth muscle,
the outer portion of a blood vessel. Blood vessels only work
when both endothelia and vascular smooth muscle are bound together.
Previous work on integrin a4b1 showed that the protein worked
in the immune system by binding with another molecule called
VCAM, so the researchers next looked for evidence of VCAM in
the vascular smooth muscle cells, called pericytes.
Indeed, Varner’s
team found VCAM on the nascent blood vessel’s pericytes,
but not in mature vessel pericytes. The two molecules, Varner
discovered, work together to bring the endothelial cells together
with the outer pericytes to create new intact blood vessels,
with integrin as the lock and VCAM as the key. Drugs that inhibit
either the integrin or the VCAM molecule prevented intact blood
vessels from forming.
“When the integrin
meets with VCAM, both cell types receive survival signals at
this active stage of blood vessel development, which occurs
mainly in tumors in adults,” said Varner. “This
was a chance discovery, which was exciting, and we think it
may have important clinical significance.”
In their current studies
of breast cancer patients for the presence of the integrin and
VCAM, “We want to know if the integrins predict aggressive
breast cancer. If so, this could become a valuable, non-invasive
diagnostic tool for cancer,” said Varner.
In
addition, knowing how blood vessels are finally assembled could
help lead to effective ways to stop the proliferation of cancer
cells by cutting off their nutrient supply, Varner added. Drs.
Varner and Parker are currently in discussions with pharmaceutical
companies to test integrin inhibitors in cancer clinical trials
at the new Moores UCSD Cancer Center.
Varner’s colleagues
in the study included Barbara Garmy-Susini, Hui Jin, Yuhong
Zhu, Rou-Jia Sung and Rosa Hwang, all of UCSD.
The work was supported
by grants from the National Institutes of Health, the UCSD Cancer
Center, the Charlotte Geyer Foundation and the American Heart
Association.
Media
Contact: Leslie Franz (619)
543-6163
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