Anti-angiogenic therapy induces integrin-linked kinase 1 up-regulation in a mouse model of glioblastoma.
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2010
Abstract:
Background: In order to improve our understanding of the molecular pathways that mediate tumor proliferation and
angiogenesis, and to evaluate the biological response to anti-angiogenic therapy, we analyzed the changes in the protein
profile of glioblastoma in response to treatment with recombinant human Platelet Factor 4-DLR mutated protein (PF4-DLR),
an inhibitor of angiogenesis.
Methodology/Principal Findings: U87-derived experimental glioblastomas were grown in the brain of xenografted nude
mice, treated with PF4-DLR, and processed for proteomic analysis. More than fifty proteins were differentially expressed in
response to PF4-DLR treatment. Among them, integrin-linked kinase 1 (ILK1) signaling pathway was first down-regulated
but then up-regulated after treatment for prolonged period. The activity of PF4-DLR can be increased by simultaneously
treating mice orthotopically implanted with glioblastomas, with ILK1-specific siRNA. As ILK1 is related to malignant
progression and a poor prognosis in various types of tumors, we measured ILK1 expression in human glioblatomas,
astrocytomas and oligodendrogliomas, and found that it varied widely; however, a high level of ILK1 expression was
correlated to a poor prognosis.
Conclusions/Significance: Our results suggest that identifying the molecular pathways induced by anti-angiogenic
therapies may help the development of combinaatorial treatment strategies that increase the therapeutic efficacy of
angiogenesis inhibitors by association with specific agents that disrupt signaling in tumor cells.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Elenco autori:
Sala, Carlo; Verpelli, Chiara
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