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Cell, Tumor, and Stem Cell Biology |
1 Vascular Biology Program and Department of Surgery and 2 Department of Opthalmology, Children's Hospital Boston and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts and 3 Vertex Pharmaceuticals, Cambridge, Massachusetts
Requests for reprints: Taturo Udagawa, Vascular Biology Program and Department of Surgery, Karp Family Research Laboratories, Children's Hospital Boston and Harvard Medical School, 1 Blackfan Circle, Boston, MA 02115. Phone: 617-919-2429; Fax: 617-730-0231; E-mail: taturo.udagawa{at}childrens.harvard.edu.
Radiation can potentially suppress neovascularization by inhibiting the incorporation of hematopoietic precursors as well as damaging mature endothelial cells. The purpose of these studies was to quantify the effect of radiation on angiogenesis and to examine the relationship between bone marrow reconstitution and neovascularization. Immune competent, severe combined immunodeficient, RAG1-deficient, and green fluorescence protein transgenic mice in the C57 genetic background, as well as the highly angiogenic 129S1/SvlmJ strain of mice, underwent whole-body or localized exposure to radiation. The hematopoietic systems in the irradiated recipients were restored by bone marrow transfer. Hematopoietic reconstitution was assessed by doing complete blood counts. Angiogenesis was induced in the mouse cornea using 80 ng of purified basic fibroblast growth factor, and the neovascular response was quantified using a slit lamp biomicroscope. Following whole-body exposure and bone marrow transplantation, the hematopoietic system was successfully reconstituted over time, but the corneal angiogenic response was permanently and significantly blunted up to 66%. Localized exposure of the eyes to radiation suppressed corneal angiogenesis comparably to whole-body exposure. Whole-body irradiation with ocular shielding induced bone marrow suppression but did not inhibit corneal neovascularization. In mice exposed to radiation before tumor implantation, the reduced local angiogenic response correlated with significantly reduced growth of tumor cells in vivo. These results indicate that bone marrow suppression does not suppress neovascularization in the mouse cornea and that although hematopoietic stem cells can readily reconstitute peripheral blood, they do not restore a local radiation-induced deficit in neovascular response. [Cancer Res 2007;67(5):20405]
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