PLoS ONE (Jan 2014)

Anti-VEGF-A affects the angiogenic properties of tumor-derived microparticles.

  • Michal Munster,
  • Ella Fremder,
  • Valeria Miller,
  • Neta Ben-Tsedek,
  • Shiri Davidi,
  • Stefan J Scherer,
  • Yuval Shaked

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0095983
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 4
p. e95983

Abstract

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Tumor derived microparticles (TMPs) have recently been shown to contribute to tumor re-growth partially by inducing the mobilization and tumor homing of specific bone marrow derived pro-angiogenic cells (BMDCs). Since antiangiogenic drugs block proangiogenic BMDC mobilization and tumor homing, we asked whether TMPs from cells exposed to an antiangiogenic drug may affect BMDC activity and trafficking. Here we show that the level of VEGF-A is reduced in TMPs from EMT/6 breast carcinoma cells exposed to the anti-VEGF-A antibody, B20. Consequently, these TMPs exhibit reduced angiogenic potential as evaluated by a Matrigel plug and Boyden chamber assays. Consistently, BMDC mobilization, tumor angiogenesis, microvessel density and BMDC-colonization in growing tumors are reduced in mice inoculated with TMPs from B20-exposed cells as compared to mice inoculated with control TMPs. Collectively, our results suggest that the neutralization of VEGF-A in cultured tumor cells can block TMP-induced BMDC mobilization and colonization of tumors and hence provide another mechanism of action by which antiangiogenic drugs act to inhibit tumor growth and angiogenesis.