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Experimental Therapeutics, Molecular Targets, and Chemical Biology |
Department of Pharmacology, Boyer Center for Molecular Medicine, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut
Requests for reprints: William C. Sessa, Vascular Biology and Transplantation Program, Department of Pharmacology, Boyer Center for Molecular Medicine, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT 06536. Phone: 203-737-2213; Fax: 203-737-2290; E-mail: william.sessa{at}yale.edu.
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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Recently, there are reports demonstrating that modulation of tumor permeability may regulate tumor progression. For example, angiopoietin-1overexpressing transgenic mice are resistant to vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF)induced vascular leakage (5, 6) and human colon cancer cells (HT29)overexpressing angiopoietin-1 can significantly reduce VEGF-mediated increases in vascular permeability and grow slower when implanted into mice (7). In a different model, treatment of mice bearing tumors with an antipermeability peptide, called cavtratin, acutely reduces tumor microvascular permeability and subsequently attenuates tumor progression in mice (8). Furthermore, the angiogenesis inhibitors angiostatin and TNP-470 also acutely reduce vascular leakage in two models of retinopathy (9) as well as VEGF-mediated vascular permeability in mouse skin and tumors (10). These antiangiogenic agents, although effective in targeting endothelial angiogenic properties such as proliferation and migration resulting in reduced tumor growth, all have significant effects in reducing tumor permeability, suggesting that the concept of antiangiogenic therapy could probably extend beyond blocking strictly angiogenesis but also vascular permeability as well.
Vascular permeability can occur either through a transcellular route or paracellular pathways and one potential transcellular pathway may occur via caveolae. Caveolae can constitute up to 30% of endothelial surface area in capillaries and provide a means of transcellular transport of macromolecules (11). Interestingly, in mice deficient in the gene for caveolin-1 (Cav-1), the main structural coat protein for caveolae in endothelial cells, epithelial cells, adipocytes, smooth muscle, and fibroblasts, radio-iodinated albumin is cleared from circulation at an accelerated rate and these mice exhibit a striking hyperpermeable phenotype in their vasculature (12). Because Cav-1 is a negative regulator of nitric oxide (NO) synthesis, it was proposed that the increase in permeability is a NO-dependent process because administration of N-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME), a well-established inhibitor of NO synthase, rescued the hyperpermeable phenotype seen in Cav-1 knockout (KO) mice (12). One hypothesis that derived from these observation was that because Cav-1 was an endogenous inhibitor of endothelial NO synthase (eNOS), the loss of Cav-1 may result in hyperactivation of eNOS and that NO may play a role in altering blood flow and paracellular junctional permeability.
In light of the hyperpermeable characteristics of the Cav-1 KO vasculature, we sought to test our hypothesis that permeability contributes to tumor progression. Thus, the goal of our present study was to examine whether the hyperpermeability observed in Cav-1 KO mice vasculature can also be extended to the tumor vasculature and whether this contributes to an increase in tumor progression.
| Materials and Methods |
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Mouse endothelial cell isolation and culture. Mouse lung endothelial cells (MLEC) were isolated from WT or Cav-1 KO mice as previously described (14). After immortalization with polyoma middle T-antigen (a gift from Drs. Luca Primo and Federico Bussolino), immunoisolated endothelial cells were culture in EBM-2/EGM-2 MV medium (Cambrex, East Rutherford, NJ).
Tumor implantation. Lewis lung carcinoma (LLC) cells (106) were injected s.c. in the back of 6- to 8-week-old WT or Cav-1 KO mice. When tumors became palpable, they were monitored for tumor growth by measuring the length and width of the tumor using a caliper, and tumor volume was determined by the following formula: volume = 0.52 x (width)2 x (length). For experiments with peptide, mice were randomly separated into different treatment groups and injected i.p. with 2.5 mg/kg of antennapedia or cavtratin (8) peptides daily. Cavtratin peptide is a fusion peptide composed of the putative scaffolding domain of Cav-1 (amino acids 82101; DGIWKASFTTFTVTKYWFYR) and the antennapedia internalization sequence (RQIKIWFQNRRMKWKK; ref. 8).
Tumor permeability. Mice with implanted tumors between 1,000 and 2,500 mm3 were either untreated or injected with antennapedia or cavtratin (2.5 mg/kg; i.p) at 16 and 1 h before being anesthetized so that Evans blue can be administered for 30 min (30 mg/kg i.v.). Subsequently, mice were sacrificed and perfused with PBS through the left ventricle to clear the dye from the vascular volume. Tumor masses were excised, dried in 60°C overnight, and weighed before Evans blue extraction using formamide at 55°C for 16 h. Evans blue content was quantified by reading at 630 nm in a spectrophotometer.
Immunohistochemistry. Implanted tumors after 7 days or end point tumors were excised and fixed in 3% paraformaldehyde for 2 h before either dehydration using 70% ethanol and processed for paraffin embedding or dehydration using 30% sucrose/PBS and frozen in compound. To visualize the amount of fibrinogen deposition around tumor blood vessels, 5 µm frozen sections of tumor tissue were permeabilized and blocked with 0.1% Triton X-100, 0.2% bovine serum albumin, and 5% normal donkey serum in PBS. Tissue sections were then incubated with
-fibrinogen (DAKO, Carpinteria, CA) and
platelet/endothelial cell adhesion molecule 1 (PECAM-1; PharMingen, San Jose, CA) before incubation with Alexa 488 and Alexa 594conjugated secondary antibodies (Molecular Probes, Carlsbad, CA) and coverslipping with 4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) containing mounting medium. To quantify the amount of colocalization between fibrinogen and PECAM-1, between three and six areas per slide were scored from five or six tumors from Cav-1 KO or WT mice, respectively. Each area was quantified using the colocalization module in Openlab software (Improvision, Lexington, MA), and areas of colocalization were normalized to the amount of PECAM-1positive pixel density.
To quantify tumor vasculature, 60 µm frozen sections of 7-day tumor tissue were permeabilized and blocked using 0.3% Triton X-100 and 5% normal goat serum in PBS for 1 h. Tissue sections were then incubated with
-PECAM-1 or
-VE-cadherin (PharMingen) in blocking solution for 16 h at room temperature before Alexa 488conjugated secondary antibody incubation in blocking solution for 6 h. Fluorescent images were captured using a Zeiss microscope and analyzed using the Openlab image analysis software. At least two areas per tumor were analyzed, and images of each area were captured over the range of 40- to 44-µm-thick, compiled as a Z-series of 2-µm-thick slices. Each Z-series slice was subtracted for background, and 19 slices deconvolved to minimize overlapping fluorescence from adjacent slices. The final image was derived from a composite of 19 processed slices and used for pixel density quantitation by the Openlab software to generate the percentage of positive areas relative to the total observed tumor area.
To label proliferative nuclei, 5-µm paraffin sections from 7- or 12-day tumor tissues were immunostained for Ki-67. The number of Ki-67positive nuclei were manually counted from four random nonnecrotic areas per tissue sections (two sections per tumor) and normalized to the total number of hematoxylin-stained nuclei (between 500 to 1,500 nuclei scored per area).
Terminal deoxyribonucleotide transferasemediated nick-end labeling assay. Paraffin-embedded tumor tissue sections were processed for terminal deoxyribonucleotide transferasemediated nick-end labeling (TUNEL)positive nuclear staining using ApoTag kit (Chemicon, Temecula, CA) similar to previously described (8). At least five to eight random nonnecrotic areas of the tumor sections from two sections of each tumor mass were quantified for TUNEL-positive nuclei using Scion Image 1.62 and normalized to total area quantified.
VEGF ELISA. Flash-frozen tumor tissue from end point tumors were pulverized on dry ice and homogenized using a rotor-stator homogenizer (PowerGen 125, Fisher Scientific, Pittsburgh, PA) to allow efficient lysis in modified radioimmunoprecipitation assay buffer (RIPA) containing 50 mmol/L Tris-HCl (pH 7.4), 0.1 mmol/L EGTA, 0.1 mmol/L EDTA, 1% NP40, 0.1% SDS, 0.1% DOC, 1 mmol/L sodium orthovanadate, 20 mmol/L NaF, 1 mmol/L Na4P2O7, 1 mmol/L Pefabloc SC, and protease inhibitor cocktail (Roche Diagnostics, Indianapolis, IN). After normalizing for total protein concentration, tumor samples were used to determine VEGF levels in the tumors by ELISA (Quantikine mouse VEGF Immunoassay, R&D Systems, Minneapolis, MN).
Immunoprecipitation and Western blotting. MLECs were serum starved in EBM-2 medium for 36 to 48 h before stimulating with VEGF (100 ng/mL) for the indicated times. Cells were rinsed with ice-cold PBS and lysed in modified RIPA lysis buffer and subjected to immunoprecipitation with VEGFR-2 antibody (Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Santa Cruz, CA) and/or Western blotting with phosphotyrosine (pTyr, 4G10, Upstate), VE-cadherin (PharMingen), Cav-1 (Santa Cruz Biotechnology), Hsp90, and Cav-2 (Transduction Laboratories, Lexington, KY) similar to previously described (8).
| Results |
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Cavtratin significantly decreases tumor hyperpermeability in Cav-1 KO mice and results in attenuated tumor growth. Previously, we have shown that cavtratin, a cell-permeable peptide derived from Cav-1 that inhibits eNOS acutely, reduces tumor hyperpermeability, and chronic treatment with this peptide can significantly reduce tumor growth (8). Furthermore, because it has been reported that the hyperpermeability observed in Cav-1 KO mice is due to hyperactivation of eNOS (12, 13), we sought to examine whether cavtratin can also reduce tumor permeability in Cav-1 KO mice by virtue of its ability to inhibit eNOS and serve as a surrogate for endogenous Cav-1. After implanted LLC reached between 1,000 and 2,000 mm3 in size, mice were randomly separated into two groups for treatment with either the control internalization antennapedia peptide or cavtratin and challenged with Evans blue. As seen in Fig. 1A, Cav-1 KO tumors (Fig. 3A, open columns ) had significantly higher microvascular permeability than those implanted in WT mice (Fig. 3A, solid columns) among the control antennapedia peptide groups. Short-term treatment with the cavtratin in WT mice reduced tumor permeability (17). Interestingly, cavtratin administration to the Cav-1 KO mice also significantly decreased tumor microvascular permeability to a similar extent as those observed in WT (Fig. 3A). These results indicate that acute administration of an antipermeability agent by virtue of inhibiting eNOS can reduce tumor vascular permeability in a model of elevated tumor vascular permeability.
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) was significantly faster than that seen in the antennapedia-treated WT (
, Fig. 3B). Furthermore, daily treatment of WT mice with cavtratin reduces tumor growth (
compared with
, Fig. 3B); however, cavtratin markedly reduces tumor growth in LLC implanted into Cav-1 KO mice. Thus, treatment of Cav-1 KO mice with cavtratin decreases tumor progression to a similar extent as WT mice treated with the control antennapedia peptide. Cav-1 is important for regulation of VEGFR-2 tyrosine phosphorylation and association with adherens junction complex. To shed light on additional possible mechanisms in which Cav-1 deficiency in the tumor vasculature may contribute to increased tumor angiogenesis and permeability, we isolated endothelial cells from WT and Cav-1 KO mice. Cav-1 was absent in lysates from Cav-1 KO and Cav-2 levels were reduced due to the importance of Cav-1 in stabilizing Cav-2 protein (Fig. 4A, top ; ref. 18). Because Cav-1 has been shown to associate with and negatively regulate VEGF receptor 2 (VEGFR-2; ref. 19), we examined VEGFR-2 phosphorylation in the absence and presence of VEGF stimulation. As seen in Fig. 4A (bottom), VEGFR-2 after immunoprecipitation is detected as a doublet (arrowheads in Fig. 4A and B), with the higher molecular weight band representing the highly glycosylated mature form of VEGFR-2 that can be tyrosine phosphorylated (white arrowhead) and the lower band representing a presumably less glycosylated form of VEGFR-2 that is not phosphorylated (2022). In WT endothelial cells, VEGF promotes the time-dependent increase in VEGFR-2 phosphorylation that is maximal at 10 min post stimulation and dissipates by 30 min. In Cav-1 KO endothelial cell, VEGF-stimulated VEGFR-2 tyrosine phosphorylation was more robust and sustained compared with WT endothelial cells (as quantified in Fig. 4A, right). Because VEGFR-2 has been previously reported to associate with proteins from the adherens junction such as VE-cadherin and ß-catenin (20, 22, 23) that negatively regulate the tyrosine phosphorylation on VEGFR-2 (20), we examined whether the increased tyrosine phosphorylation on VEGFR-2 seen in Cav-1 KO endothelial cells could also be attributed to its lack of association with VE-cadherin. Indeed, we observed decreased basal and VEGF-stimulated association between VEGFR-2 and the VE-cadherin complex in the Cav-1 KO endothelial cells compared with WT endothelial cells (Fig. 4B, left, as quantified in right). These data suggest that the loss of Cav-1 may enhance VEGFR-2 phosphorylation via reduced association with VE cadherin and, in the context of eNOS hyperactivation, promote vascular permeability and tumor angiogenesis.
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| Discussion |
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Since the discovery of the caveolae organelle, many studies have tested the importance of caveolae in the regulation of vascular permeability via transcytosis of macromolecules across the endothelium. When Cav-1 KO mice were generated, they were devoid of caveolae in many cell types, because Cav-1 is the major coat protein for the organelle and is necessary for the formation of caveolae (13, 18, 24). With the major transcytotic organelle absent, these mice were predicted to have decreased vascular permeability. Thus, it was rather surprising when Schubert et al. (12) reported enhanced vascular hyperpermeability observed in Cav-1 KO mice. One hypothesis put forth by this report was that because Cav-1 was a tonic inhibitor for eNOS (25), the paradoxical increase in vascular permeability observed in Cav-1 KO mice maybe through a compensatory paracellular pathway via hyperactivation of eNOS as an inhibitor to NOS could partially reverse the hyperpermeability observed in these Cav-1 KO mice (12). eNOS is required for VEGF-driven permeability in vivo (8, 26, 27), and eNOS is necessary for tumor microvascular permeability and growth (8, 28). In the present study, tumor permeability was increased in Cav-1 KO mice (Fig. 1A and B), consistent with the reported increase in albumin clearance from Cav-1 KO circulation (12). Our observations that macromolecule deposition and tumor growth are greater in tumors implanted in Cav-1 KO mice is consistent with the hypothesis that tumor permeability is an important contributing factor supporting tumor growth.
Tumors implanted into the Cav-1 KO mice have increased tumor angiogenesis. This increase in angiogenesis may account for the increased tumor vascular permeability observed in Fig. 1A; however, when extravasated fibrinogen was normalized to the tumor vasculature, we still observed increase in permeability by the amount of fibrinogen deposition to the tumor blood vessels (Fig. 1B, inset). This suggests that the increased vascular permeability in the Cav-1 KO mice is an inherent property of the vasculature due to Cav-1 deficiency and contributes to increased angiogenesis (16). Tumor permeability and angiogenesis are most likely interdependent, creating a positive feedback mechanism to support increased tumor growth.
The precise role of Cav-1 in angiogenesis is still far from being elucidated. Both proangiogenic and antiangiogenic effects of Cav-1 have been shown in either Matrigel or tumor models. More specifically, Liu et al. (29) observed in a Matrigel model that overexpression of Cav-1 can enhance endothelial tube formation, implicating a proangiogenic potential of Cav-1. Studies by the same group also showed that B16-F10 tumors implanted in Cav-1 KO had impaired angiogenesis, leading to smaller tumors (30). In contrast to these studies but in agreement with our findings, Brouet et al. (31) reported that Cav-1 overexpression in endothelial cells decreased VEGF-induced migration and prevented endothelial tube formation in Matrigel. Furthermore, cationic lipid-based transfection of Cav-1 increased Cav-1 expression in the tumor vasculature and resulted in decreased tumor growth (31). The apparent discrepancy between the different groups may come from the different models examined. Matrigel models do not mimic a tumor microenvironment where tumor secreted cytokines and growth factors as well as the host inflammatory responses during tumor invasion may influence the angiogenic profile of these tumors. Furthermore, Matrigel models do not take into account permeability aspects of angiogenesis and cavtratin, an antipermeability peptide, while capable of attenuating tumor permeability, angiogenesis, and growth did not influence angiogenesis in Matrigel plugs (8).
To further investigate the effects of Cav-1 deficiency on tumor growth, we examined proliferation and apoptosis in tumors implanted into WT and Cav-1 KO mice. As seen in Fig. 2B, tumors implanted into Cav-1 KO mice had decreased apoptosis, whereas their proliferative indices were not augmented (Fig. 2C). Studies by Holmgren et al. revealed that tumor cells of dormant metastases remain dormant when the high rate of tumor cell proliferation is balanced by a high rate of tumor cell apoptosis and that antiangiogenic therapy with endostatin (32), angiostatin (33), and TNP-470 (34) shifts this equilibrium to increase cell death without apparent changes in the tumor cell proliferative index (34). Furthermore, Garcia-Barros et al. (35) showed that tumors implanted into mice that are resistant to endothelial cell apoptosis had increased tumor growth and less sensitivity to radiotherapy. These studies indicate that tumor growth is highly dependent on the survival of host endothelial cells and less on the active proliferation of tumor cells. From our studies, we did not delineate the apoptotic and proliferative indices between tumor cells or host endothelial cells. Thus, we cannot rule out the effect of Cav-1 deficiency in promoting endothelial cell survival or proliferation, which ultimately may contribute to the increased angiogenesis seen in the tumor vasculature in Cav-1 KO mice.
Previously, we reported that cavtratin significantly decreased tumor permeability after acute administration (8). This peptide was originally designed as a fusion peptide that couples the cell-permeable peptide, antennapedia, to the caveolin scaffolding domain of Cav-1, the latter capable of binding directly to eNOS and inhibit its catalytic activity (25, 36). Furthermore, this peptide, by virtue of its ability in inhibiting eNOS-mediated vascular permeability (37), also led to significant decrease in tumor growth with chronic administration (8). In the present study, we show that acute administration of cavtratin reversed the hyperpermeable state of the Cav-1 KO tumor microvasculature to a comparable level seen in WT (Fig. 3A). Furthermore, this peptide can significantly decrease tumor progression in Cav-1 KO mice to a similar growth rate as WT mice (Fig. 3B). These data are in accordance with a previous report where Schubert et al. (12) reported that administration of a NOS inhibitor, L-NAME, could reduce the hyperpermeability phenotype observed in the Cav-1 KO mice. Thus, the significant effect of this peptide in Cav-1 KO seen here implies that the hyperpermeability mediated by Cav-1 deficiency is, in part, due to eNOS hyperactivation [also reported by Drab et al. (13), who observed increased cyclic guanosine 3',5'-monophosphate accumulation in Cav-1 KO tissues]. Together, these studies corroborate the importance of eNOS in mediating tumor permeability and ultimately tumor angiogenesis and growth.
In an attempt to address other potential mechanisms in which Cav-1 deficiency can contribute to increased permeability, we first determined whether the increase in angiogenesis and permeability seen in tumors implanted in Cav-1 KO mice was due to increased local production of VEGF using the ELISA-based assay. VEGF is overexpressed in most tumors; in fact, expression levels of VEGF correlates often with malignant progression. The unexpected finding that Cav-1 KO mice had tumors with decreased levels of VEGF (Fig. 2D) show that the hyperpermeability in these tumors maybe due to increased VEGFRs expressed on tumor vasculature, and, thus, less VEGF is required to elicit an angiogenic response. In addition, there may be VEGF-independent pathways that contribute to the hyperpermeability state and increased growth rate (38).
On the other hand, the decreased levels of VEGF observed in tumors from Cav-1 KO mice may also be speculated as a result of altered tumor hypoxic microenvironment because we observed an increase in vascular density in these tumors (Fig. 2A). Without examining the degree of oxygenation in these tumors, we cannot rule out the effect of hypoxia and, thus, more studies are needed to delineate the causal relationship between vascular density, permeability, and VEGF expression in tumors implanted in WT and Cav-1 KO mice.
To further examine the mechanisms in which Cav-1 deficiency contributes to an increased angiogenic response, we isolated endothelial cells from WT and Cav-1 KO mice. We observed that VEGFR-2 is hyperphosphorylated in Cav-1 KO endothelial cells in response to VEGF compared with WT endothelial cells (Fig. 4A). Interestingly, Cav-1 has been previously found to negatively regulate VEGFR-2 activation (19) and in vitro incubation of endothelial cell lysates with the scaffolding domain of Cav-1 fused to glutathione S-transferase (GST-Cav61-101) decreased VEGFR-2 autophosphorylation (19). Akin to the inhibitory effect of Cav-1 on eNOS, it is feasible that removal of Cav-1 relieves the inhibitory actions on VEGFR-2 and allows for hyperphosphorylation in response to VEGF. This may also explain why we observed increased tumor permeability and angiogenesis in Cav-1 KO mice despite decreased levels of tumor-secreted VEGF (Fig. 2D).
The hyperpermeability of tumor vasculature in Cav-1 KO mice (Fig. 1A and B) prompted us to investigate whether VE-cadherin, a key modulator of paracellular permeability, played a role in regulating permeability in the absence of Cav-1 because VE cadherin interacts with VEGFR-2 (20, 22, 23, 39) and regulates the dephosphorylation of VEGFR-2. In Cav-1 KO endothelial cells, immunoprecipitation of VEGFR-2 resulted in a reduced basal and VEGF-stimulated interaction with VE-cadherin and ß-catenin (Fig. 4B and data not shown) that correlated with increased VEGFR-2 phosphorylation. Our observation that Cav-1 is important for VEGFR-2 and VE-cadherin interactions adds another level of complexity to the role of VE-cadherin in regulating VEGF signaling and suggests that Cav-1 may serve as a docking partner for the regulation of VEGFR-2 by VE-cadherin and other associated kinases/phosphatases.
In conclusion, we have provided evidence that Cav-1 is an important mediator of tumor vascular permeability such that genetic ablation of host Cav-1 results in a hyperpermeable endothelium, allowing macromolecules to extravasate into the tumor interstitium. The hyperpermeability observed contributes to increased tumor growth and angiogenesis, promoting tumor cell survival. Mechanistically, Cav-1mediated increase in permeability is in part due to changes in the modulation of VEGFR-2 phosphorylation and interaction with adherens junction proteins. The negative effect of Cav-1 on VEGFR-2 phosphorylation and eNOS may additively contribute to the increased tumor permeability, survival and ultimately tumor growth.
| 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 Drs. Marek Drab and Teymuras Kurzchalia (Max Planck Institute, Dresden, Germany) for the Cav-1 KO mice; Dr. Donald McDonald (Department of Anatomy, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA) for providing the protocol for thick tissue section immunofluorescent labeling; and Drs. Luca Primo and Federico Bussolino (University of Torino, Turin, Italy) for providing the polyoma middle T-antigen retrovirus for MLEC immortalization.
| Footnotes |
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Received 11/ 6/06. Revised 12/22/06. Accepted 1/17/07.
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