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Molecular Biology, Pathobiology, and Genetics |
1 Collagen Research Unit, Biocenter Oulu and Department of Medical Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, and 2 Department of Pathology, University of Oulu, Oulu, Finland; 3 Department of Medicine, Clinical Immunology and Allergy Unit, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden; and 4 Molecular/Cancer Biology Laboratory and Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research, Biomedicum Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland
Requests for reprints: Ritva Heljasvaara, Collagen Research Unit, Biocenter Oulu and Department of Medical Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Oulu, FIN-90014 Oulu, Finland. Phone: 358-8-5375840; Fax: 358-8-5375811; E-mail: ritva.heljasvaara{at}oulu.fi.
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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Diverse molecular mechanisms are associated with endostatin signaling. Among other effects, endostatin can reduce endothelial cell motility by interfering with basic fibroblast growth factor–induced signal transduction (5), induce apoptosis of endothelial cells (6), and block vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF)-mediated signaling by directly interacting with the receptor VEGFR-2 (7). The most consistent effect of endostatin is the inhibition of growth factor–induced endothelial cell migration, which is thought to occur by binding to integrin
5β1 (8), and subsequent disruption of cell-matrix adhesion via caveolin-1/Src tyrosine kinase/Rho (9, 10) or via FAK/Ras/Raf/extracellular signal-regulated kinase1/p38 signaling pathways (11). Using genome-wide expression profiling, Abdollahi and coworkers (12) showed that endostatin affects the expression of up to 12% of the genes in human endothelial cells, down-regulating the angiogenic stimulators, and up-regulating many antiangiogenic genes. Moreover, they showed that endostatin affects signaling events that are not directly associated with angiogenesis, demonstrating the importance of interpathway communications in a complex signaling network.
We have recently reported on the generation and characterization of transgenic mice overproducing endostatin in the skin and in the eye lens capsule under the keratin 14 promoter (J4 mice; ref. 13). These mice develop cataract of the lens due to loosening of the contact of the epithelial cells with the lens capsule and due to abnormal proliferation and clustering of these cells. They also have significantly broadened epidermal basement membranes, and a similar phenotype has been observed in mice lacking collagen XVIII (14), indicating that endostatin and its precursor have a role in maintaining the structural integrity of the basement membranes (13).
We have used the J4 mice to analyze the effects of elevated endostatin levels on chemically induced skin tumors and tumor vascularization. Most in vivo studies reporting the antiangiogenic and antitumor effects of endostatin have been performed using tumors implanted in mice and have involved substantial doses of recombinant endostatin (reviewed in 2). To our knowledge, only one previous study describes the antitumor effects of recombinant endostatin administration on carcinogen-induced mammary tumors in the rat (15). We used a multistage mouse skin carcinogenesis protocol involving 7,12-dimethylbenz[
]anthracene (DMBA) and 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) treatments to induce tumor formation (16). This approach allowed us to follow the consequences of continuous skin-specific endostatin overexpression on tumor angiogenesis and tumor progression at different stages in skin carcinogenesis. We present here in vivo and in vitro evidence that endostatin regulates the infiltration of VEGF-C–producing mast cells into the tumor tissue, which leads to decreased lymphangiogenesis and lymph node metastasis, and that it also modulates the terminal differentiation of SCCs in the mouse skin.
| Materials and Methods |
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Chemical skin carcinogenesis. Each experimental group consisted of 25 to 30 J4 and control mice aged for 12 weeks. Their dorsal skin was shaved and tumors were induced by a single topical application of 100 µg of DMBA (Sigma-Aldrich) in 100 µL of acetone. After 1 week, tumor formation was promoted by treating the mice weekly for 12 to 20 weeks with 5 µg of TPA (Sigma-Aldrich) in 100 µL of acetone. Tumor growth was monitored as follows: Group 1, DMBA initiation followed by TPA promotion for 12 weeks and sacrifice at 13 weeks; Group 2, DMBA initiation followed by TPA promotion for 20 weeks and sacrifice at 24 weeks; and Group 3, DMBA initiation followed by TPA promotion for 20 weeks and sacrifice at 34 weeks. The number of tumors on each mouse was counted weekly for the duration of the experiment, and tumor size was measured with a gauge. The tumor incidence (percentage of mice with a tumor) and tumor multiplicity (number of papillomas per mouse) were recorded. Mice were sacrificed if moribund or if the tumor load was excessive. All the animal experiments were approved by the Animal Care and Use Committee of the University of Oulu and by the State Provincial Office of Oulu.
Tumor and tissue sample harvesting. Mice were sacrificed, the skin tumors were removed, and a complete autopsy, including lymph node dissection, was performed. The samples were evaluated by a pathologist in a blinded manner on the basis of H&E-stained sections, and the skin alterations were classified as representing hyperplasia, dysplasia, papilloma, keratoacanthoma, well-, moderately, or poorly differentiated SCC or spindle cell carcinoma. The autopsy samples were evaluated histopathologically for the presence of metastases.
Histochemical and immunohistochemical analyses. Tissue sections were either treated with trypsin for 30 min at 37°C and stained with a rat antimouse CD-31 antibody (platelet/endothelial cell adhesion molecule 1; BD Biosciences PharMingen), heated in a microwave oven in EDTA-Tris buffer (pH 9,0) and stained with an antirabbit VEGF-C antibody (Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Inc.), or treated with 10 mmol/L citrate buffer (pH 3.0) for 30 min at 37°C and stained with a rat antimouse monoclonal F4/80 antibody against macrophages (Serotec). The tyramide signal amplification kit (TSA; Perkin-Elmer Life Sciences) was used according the manufacturer's instructions to intensify the color reactions. A biotinylated antirat or antirabbit antibody (Vector Laboratories) was used as a secondary antibody. For Lyve-1 and VEGFR-3 immunostainings, sections were heated in a microwave oven in 10 mmol/L citrate buffer (pH 6.0) and incubated with an antimouse Lyve-1 antibody or with an antimouse VEGFR-3 antibody (17), using the TSA signal amplification protocol. A biotinylated antirabbit or antirabbit IgG antibody (Vector Laboratories) was used for detection. Mast cells were detected by Leder's method of chloroacetate esterase histochemistry (18). The number of mast cells within the tumor and peritumoral stroma was counted from ten random fields of 0.1 mm2, covering 1.0 mm2 area in total.
Determination of vessel density. The immunostained tumor sections were analyzed at x100 magnification to identify the areas of high vascularization, either in the tumor itself (blood vessels only) or in the surrounding area (blood vessels and lymphatic vessels). Vessels were counted in 10 fields (carcinomas) or 5 fields (papillomas) representing the areas of highest vascular density at x200 magnification. Branching structures were considered as a single vessel, and the average of the microvessel counts was calculated.
Apoptosis assay. The terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUTP-biotin end labeling (TUNEL) assay was performed using an in situ cell death detection kit (Roche Diagnostics) according to the manufacturer's instructions with some modifications. The paraformaldehyde-fixed sections were incubated in 3% H2O2/methanol for 10 min at room temperature, permeabilized with proteinase K for 10 min at 37°C, and incubated for 30 min at 37°C in the TUNEL reaction buffer containing the label solution and the enzyme solution, both diluted 1:1 with TUNEL-diluting buffer. The following steps were carried out as suggested except that the duration of the incubation in 3,3'-diaminobenzidine was reduced to 15 s. Five random fields at x200 magnification were counted to determine the numbers of apoptotic cells.
Proliferation assay. Antigen retrieval was performed by heating the sections for 10 min in a microwave oven in 10 mmol/L citrate buffer (pH 6.0). The sections were incubated overnight at 4°C with a monoclonal rat antimouse Ki67 antibody (DAKOCytomation), and a Cy3-conjugated goat antirat antibody (Jackson Immunoresearch Laboratories, Inc.) was used as a secondary antibody. Five random fields at x200 magnification were counted to determine the numbers of proliferating cells in the sections.
Cell culture. The murine mast cell line MC/9 (a gift from Dr. Gunnar Nilsson, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden) was maintained in RPMI 1640 (Sigma-Aldrich) supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum, 10 ng/mL of recombinant mouse interleukin-3 (Sigma-Aldrich), 0.1 mmol/L nonessential amino acids, 10 mmol/L HEPES, 1 mmol/L sodium pyruvate, 4 mmol/L L-glutamine, and 50 µmol/L 2-mercaptoethanol.
Expression and purification of recombinant endostatin. The cloning and the purification of recombinant human endostatin have been described earlier (8).
Adhesion assay. 96-well plates were coated overnight at 4°C with 25 µg/mL of fibronectin (BD Biosciences) in PBS or with 3% bovine serum albumin (BSA) in PBS to determine the spontaneous adhesion (data not shown). The remaining binding sites were blocked with 5% BSA in PBS for 2 h at 37°C. 5 x 104 MC/9 mast cells in complete culture medium were preincubated with different concentrations of recombinant endostatin (or with BSA as a control) for 1 h at 37°C and added to the substrate-coated wells. To induce the cell adhesion, stem cell factor (SCF; Sigma-Aldrich), at 35 µg/mL, was added to the wells immediately after cell loading (19). Cells were allowed to attach on substrate for 80 min at 37°C in 5% CO2, after which the wells were washed twice with PBS to remove nonadherent cells. Trypsin-EDTA was added to the wells to recover adherent cells. The numbers of the recovered adherent and nonadherent living cells were determined using a hemocytometer. Each well was done at least in duplicate, and the experiment was repeated several times. To test the specificity of endostatin, 5 µg/mL of recombinant endostatin was preincubated with 1 µg/mL of antihuman endostatin antibody (HES.6; ref. 20), or with a nonrelevant polyclonal IgG antibody (Santa Cruz, Inc.), for 1 h at room temperature before adding to the cells.
Migration assay. The migration assay was performed by using 8.0-µm pore size Transwell inserts (Greiner Bio One). Micropore filters were coated overnight at 4°C with 40 µg/mL of fibronectin in PBS, and the remaining binding sites were blocked with 5% BSA in PBS for 1 h at 37°C. 5 x 104 MC/9 cells in complete culture medium were preincubated with different concentrations of recombinant endostatin (or with BSA as a control) for 1 h at 37°C, and added to the upper chamber of the Transwell insert. Complete medium supplemented with the chemoattractant SCF (35 µg/mL) was added in the lower chamber to induce the cell migration (19). Controls without SCF were performed to determine the passive diffusion (always <7%; data not shown). Cells were allowed to migrate for 8 h at 37°C in 5% CO2. The numbers of the living cells in the upper and lower chamber were counted separately using a hemocytometer. Each sample was assayed in duplicate, and the experiment was repeated twice. To test the specificity of endostatin action, 5 µg/mL of recombinant endostatin was preincubated with 1 µg/mL of antihuman endostatin antibody, or with a nonrelevant polyclonal IgG antibody, as described above for the adhesion assay.
Real-time PCR. Total RNA was extracted from the tumors using Tri-pure reagent (Sigma-Aldrich) according to the manufacturer's instructions. 0.5 µg of total RNA was reverse transcribed using 100 ng of random hexamers and Superscript II reverse transcriptase (Invitrogen). The PCR primers for VEGF-A, VEGF-C, VEGF-D, VEGFR-2, and VEGFR-3 were obtained from a published study (21). Specific primers for 18S RNA were 5'-GCAATTATTCCCCATGAACG-3' (sense) and 5'-GGCCTCACTAAACCAT CCAA-3' (antisense). The gene transcription was analyzed with the SYBR green detection method using the Stratagene Mx3500P Real-time PCR device (Stratagene). Each PCR was run in triplicate. The gene expression data were normalized against 18S, and the control values were expressed as 1 to indicate a precise fold change.
Circulating endostatin. Serum samples collected from J4 and control mice were used to determine the endostatin levels using the CytElisa Mouse Endostatin enzyme immunoassay kit (Nordic Biosite AB) according to the manufacturer's protocol.
Statistical analysis. Statistical analysis for most of the experiments was performed using Student's t test. Differences in histopathology and metastasis formation between the groups were assessed using the
2 test and confirmed with the Fisher's exact test.
| Results |
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7-fold higher (189 ± 55 ng/mL) than in the control FVB/N mice (27 ± 6.9 ng/mL) and increased further in both strains upon cancer induction, although relatively less so in the control mice, so that levels of 495 ± 61 ng/mL (2.6-fold) were reached in the tumor-bearing J4 mice versus 35.5 ± 10.8 ng/mL (1.3-fold) in the tumor-bearing wild-type mice. A comparison of carcinogen-induced skin tumorigenesis between the J4 mice and the wild-type control mice in three experimental groups (13, 24, and 34 weeks) is presented in Table 1 and Fig. 1 . In view of the well-documented antitumor effects of endostatin (2), we expected to find a lower tumor incidence and/or multiplicity and/or smaller tumor size in the J4 mice, but in practice, the tumors began to emerge after a similar latency period (7–8 weeks) in both strains, and no differences in incidence were detected, as the same proportion of both the J4 mice and the wild-type mice (95%) developed papillomas upon chemical treatment (Fig. 1A). Tumor multiplicity showed no changes in the J4 mice either; the transgenic mice yielding an average of 9.0 papillomas per mouse compared with 9.7 in the control group, but a sharper decrease in the number of papillomas was observed in the J4 mice after 30 weeks (not significant, t test; Fig. 1B). However, from the 20-week time point onwards, the papillomas in the J4 mice were smaller in size than those in the wild-type mice, and this difference was statistically significant (P < 0.05 at most time points and P < 0.001 in several time points, t test; Fig. 1C). In addition, histopathologic evaluation of the skin lesions at 13 weeks time point showed that there was a delay in the development of the papillomas in the J4 mice at an early stage in skin carcinogenesis, 36% having papillomas at week 13 compared with 64.7% of the wild-type mice (P < 0.05, t test; Table 1).
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2 test; Table 1 and Fig. 1D). The depth of local invasion of the SCCs seemed to be higher in the control group, in which the cancers more often extended into the s.c. tissues and muscular layer (75% versus 55% in the J4 mice), but this difference was not statistically significant (P = 0.210,
2 test; data not shown). Moreover, histopathologic analysis of the autopsy samples collected from most of the mice bearing SCCs indicated that lymph node metastases at 34 weeks were statistically more frequent in the wild-type mice (40% in the control mice versus 7.7% in the J4 mice; P < 0.05,
2 test; Fig. 1D). Effects of endostatin on tumor angiogenesis and lymphangiogenesis. A statistically significant difference in the number of blood vessels between the two mouse strains was found only in the tumors collected at 13 weeks, where the capillary densities in the central tumor area were markedly lower in the J4 mice, as also were those in the area surrounding the tumor. The average number of blood vessels in the tumor area was 9.09 ± 2.18 per field in the J4 mice, which was markedly lower than in the wild-type mice, 14.1 ± 3.97 per field (P = 0.009, t test), whereas the difference in vessel densities was smaller in the peritumoral area (11.4 ± 2.15 per field in the J4 mice versus 15.2 ± 3.7 in the control mice; P = 0.011, t test; Fig. 2A ). No significant differences in blood vessel densities were observed between the two mouse strains in the other experimental groups; that is, at 24 and 34 weeks after DMBA treatment, neither in terms of papillomas nor of SCCs (Fig. 2A; data not shown).
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Effects of endostatin on cell proliferation and apoptosis in skin tumors. We evaluated the effects of endostatin overexpression on apoptosis by calculating the TUNEL-positive cells in tumor sections. An increase in the incidence of apoptotic keratinocytes was detected both in papillomas and SCCs in the transgenic J4 mice relative to the control mice (Fig. 3A ), a difference that was already evident at an early stage in tumor development (at 13 weeks; P = 0.01, t test) and remained significant throughout the process of malignancy. Cell death was even higher in the late-stage benign papillomas of the J4 mice (at 34 weeks; P = 0.0006 between the mouse strains, t test) than in the samples collected at earlier time points. The SCC samples collected from the J4 mice also showed increased numbers of apoptotic keratinocytes at the two later time points, again with a statistical difference between them (P < 0.05 at 24 weeks and 34 weeks, t test).
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Endostatin overexpression decreases the mRNA levels of lymphangiogenesis-related VEGF signaling components. To determine whether the difference observed in the numbers of tumor lymphatic vessels between the endostatin-overproducing mice and the controls might involve changes in the expression of VEGF family ligands or receptors, a real-time PCR analysis was carried out using total RNA extracted from papillomas collected at week 34. mRNA expression of VEGF-A, VEGF-D, and VEGFR-2 showed no differences between J4 and control mice, but the expression of VEGF-C decreased almost 7-fold, and mRNA for its receptor VEGFR-3 decreased 15-fold in tumors of the J4 mice (Fig. 4A ).
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Similarly, we examined the potential effects of endostatin on the mast cell migration using a Transwell assay. Endostatin also inhibited the MC/9 cell migration in a concentration-dependent manner (Fig. 5D). Without endostatin treatment, 56% of the mast cells migrated through the fibronectin-coated filters in response to chemoattractant SCF, whereas in presence of 5 µg/mL of endostatin, the migration decreased to 25% (P < 0.001, t test; Fig. 5D). As in the cell adhesion assays, the antiendostatin antibody, but not a nonrelevant IgG fraction, reversed the inhibitory effect of endostatin on MC/9 cell migration, confirming that the effect was specifically due to endostatin administration (Fig. 5D).
| Discussion |
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Lymph node metastases were observed in only one of the 13 transgenic J4 mice bearing SCCs (7.7%), by comparison with 40% of the corresponding control mice (6 of 15). Cancer cell metastasis to distant organs occurs via the vascular and lymphatic systems, the lymphatic system being more important in the case of SCCs (28, 29). Moreover, several reports have shown that lymphangiogenesis correlates with lymph node metastases (30, 31). Our finding of significantly less Lyve-1–positive vessels in the J4 mice than in the control mice, both in papillomas and in SCCs, is consistent with these observations and suggests that the reduction in lymph node metastases may be due to the suppression of tumor lymphangiogenesis induced by endostatin.
There are, to our knowledge, only two papers that describe endostatin's effects on lymphangiogenesis: Shao et al. (32) showed that recombinant endostatin inhibits the proliferation and migration of lymphatic endothelial cells in vitro, and Fukumoto et al. (33) showed that endostatin inhibits lymphangiogenesis and lymph expansion by down-regulating VEGF-C expression in cultured SCC cells. We also showed down-regulation of VEGF-C mRNA in papillomas in the presence of endostatin overproduction (Fig. 4A). This may partly be due to decreased expression of VEGF-C by the tumor cells, as the present study and others (19) showed an expression of this endothelial growth factor by SCCs. We also showed a strong expression of VEGF-C by tumor-associated inflammatory mast cells and observed a notably reduced number of mast cells in the skin tumors of the J4 mice. Furthermore, we showed that endostatin inhibited the adhesion and the migration of murine MC/9 mast cells on fibronectin in vitro. These data suggest that elevated endostatin levels regulate the amount of lymphangiogenesis by reducing the number of VEGF-C–producing inflammatory mast cells in the tumor tissue, which subsequently affects the amount of tumor metastasis.
Interestingly, the
5β1 and
vβ3 integrins, which mediate the effects of endostatin on endothelial cells (8, 9), have been implicated in the adhesion of human cutaneous mast cells to fibronectin and vitronectin, respectively (34, 35). It is thus possible that the binding of endostatin to these receptors inhibits mast cell adhesion and migration on the tumor matrix, although this remains to be shown. Furthermore, Coussens and coworkers (26) showed that mast cells activate angiogenesis and neoplastic progression during skin carcinogenesis in the mouse, and that the angiogenic switch is dependent on the activation of pro–matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-9 matrix metalloprotease by the mast cell serine protease. We have earlier reported that endostatin inhibits activation of pro–MMP-9 in vitro (36), and thus, the overproduction of endostatin may further decrease the amount of active MMP-9 in tumors of J4 mice and thereby suppress angiogenesis, lymphangiogenesis, and tumor progression.
We also showed a pronounced reduction in the mRNA expression of VEGFR-3 within the papillomas of the J4 mice (Fig. 4A). Endostatin down-regulated the transcription of VEGFR-2 in endothelial cells (12), and thus, it is plausible that VEGFR-3 production could also be affected by elevated endostatin. However, we think that the weak VEGFR-3 mRNA expression observed in the J4 papillomas most likely reflects the loss of lymphatic vessels in the tumors of the J4 mice.
Elevated endostatin had only minor effects on the induction and progression of skin tumors and tumor angiogenesis. We showed a decrease in blood vessels at early stage of tumor development in the J4 mice, but at later time points, the vessel numbers were comparable between the mouse strains. At 24 weeks, tumor angiogenesis seemed to be even higher in the transgenic mice, but this difference was not statistically significant (P = 0.169 and 0.275 in tumor area and surrounding area, respectively, t test; Fig. 2A). Effective therapeutic levels of circulating endostatin are up to 80 to 450 ng/mL, whereas too low and too high concentrations are ineffective (2). In the J4 mice, the circulating endostatin levels were
190 ng/mL and further increased in the SCC-bearing J4 mice up to 500 ng/mL. As the exogenous endostatin is expressed by the basal keratinocytes, it is possible that the local endostatin concentration in the skin tumors is too high for adequate angiogenesis suppression. Furthermore, angiogenesis was shown to be an early event in the DMBA-TPA–induced skin tumors and play a major role in the development of the papillomas but not in the premalignant progression (37). Consistently, we did not observe differences in the conversion of the papillomas to SCCs between the J4 and control mice, but the papillomas seemed smaller in the endostatin-overexpressing mice (Fig. 1C).
We found an increase in proliferating keratinocytes in the wild-type mice at the early stage of skin tumor development, but proliferation rates during tumor progression were comparable between the J4 and wild-type mice. Furthermore, we observed an increase in cell death in the J4 mice during progression to malignancy to reach a very high level of apoptotic keratinocytes by the end of the experiment (Fig. 3). Taken together, these data suggest that endostatin delays tumor formation at an early stage by inhibiting keratinocyte cell proliferation. Moreover, it induces apoptosis of these cells, which counterbalances the effect of the high tumor cell proliferation seen in this model, especially at the late stage in tumor progression. These findings, together with the moderately decreased angiogenesis, may explain the delay in papilloma development in the J4 mice observed in the 13-week experimental group (Table 1) and the smaller size of the papillomas from 20 weeks onward (Fig. 1C). The effects of endostatin on endothelial cell proliferation, migration, and apoptosis are acknowledged, but its role in epithelial cell behavior has not been studied in detail. Our results regarding its inhibitory effects on keratinocyte proliferation and inductive effects on keratinocyte apoptosis in vivo support previous in vitro findings with respect to its efficacy against epithelial cells as well (36, 38).
In summary, using an approach involving transgenic mice and a chemical-induced skin cancer model, we have shown that in addition to its antiangiogenic and accompanying antitumorigenic effects, endostatin can reduce lymphangiogenesis and, subsequently, lymph node metastasis in mice, and modulate the differentiation of epithelial tumor cells and the inflammatory reactions associated with cancer. Using in vitro cell culture assays, we have showed that the inhibitory effect of endostatin on lymphangiogenesis is, at least in part, due to its ability to regulate the adhesion and migration of VEGF-C–producing mast cells on extracellular tumor matrix. Our findings thus support the concept of the ability of endostatin to control a broad spectrum of signaling pathways in a coordinated fashion, by different mechanisms and at different levels, to regulate tumor cell differentiation and to restrict angiogenesis and lymphangiogenesis, and subsequently, tumor progression and metastasis.
| Acknowledgments |
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The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked advertisement in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
We thank Jaana Träskelin, Sirkka Vilmi, Aila White and Riitta Vuento for their excellent technical assistance; Dr. Pirkko Huhtala for her advice in cell adhesion and migration assays; and Dr. Carlos López Otín for his valuable comments on the manuscript.
Received 4/20/07. Revised 8/28/07. Accepted 10/ 8/07.
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T. Okazaki, A. Ni, O. A. Ayeni, P. Baluk, L.-C. Yao, D. Vossmeyer, G. Zischinsky, G. Zahn, J. Knolle, C. Christner, et al. {alpha}5{beta}1 Integrin Blockade Inhibits Lymphangiogenesis in Airway Inflammation Am. J. Pathol., June 1, 2009; 174(6): 2378 - 2387. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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