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[Cancer Research 64, 1906-1910, March 15, 2004]
© 2004 American Association for Cancer Research


Advances in Brief

Angiogenesis and Tumor Proliferation/Metastasis of Human Colorectal Cancer Cell Line SW620 Transfected with Endocrine Glands-Derived-Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor, As a New Angiogenic Factor

Takanori Goi, Masako Fujioka, Yoshiki Satoh, Shinsuke Tabata, Kenji Koneri, Hideki Nagano, Yasuo Hirono, Kanji Katayama, Kazuo Hirose and Akio Yamaguchi

Department of Surgery I, Fukui Medical University, Fukui, Japan

Endocrine glands-derived-vascular endothelial growth factor (EG-VEGF) was recently cloned as a new angiogenic factor that selectively acts on the endothelium of endocrine gland cells. We evaluated the involvement of EG-VEGF in colorectal cancer. The expression of EG-VEGF was confirmed in all of the colorectal cancer cell lines. (On the other hand, the expression of EG-VEGF mRNA was not detected in colorectal normal mucosae.) Stable EG-VEGF infectors of colorectal cancer cell line SW620 were produced, EG-VEGF transfectants were implanted into cecum and s.c., and cell proliferation was evaluated. Angiogenesis was evaluated by dorsal air sac method. Liver metastasis was evaluated after the implantation of EG-VEGF transfectants into the mouse spleen. Tumor proliferation (cecum, s.c.) was significantly higher in the EG-VEGF transfectants than in the control cells. The small vessels were significantly increased in EG-VEGF transfectants as compared with those in control cells. Also, liver metastatic ratio was higher in the EG-VEGF transfectants than in the control cells. In this study, EG-VEGF, a new angiogenic factor, may lead to angiogenesis, promoting cell proliferation and liver metastasis in colorectal cancers. When the EG-VEGF gene-overexpressing colorectal cancer cell line that had been treated with phosphorothioate antisense EG-VEGF oligonucleotides was injected s.c. into mice, angiogenesis and tumor growth were inhibited. Although the novel angiogenesis factor EG-VEGF was not expressed in the normal colorectal mucosa, it was expressed in colorectal cancer cells, which indicates that it is a cancer-specific and possibly tissue-specific angiogenesis factor in the large intestine, and which suggests that it can be targeted by a novel antiangiogenesis therapy.




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Molecular Cancer Research Cancer Prevention Research
Cancer Prevention Journals Portal Cancer Reviews Online
Annual Meeting Education Book Meeting Abstracts Online
Copyright © 2004 by the American Association for Cancer Research.