Angiogenesis Flashcards

1
Q

Mobilization process, assembly, alignment and fusion to form vasculature

A

Vasculogenesis

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2
Q

Vessels start from existing vasculature

A

Angiogenesis

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3
Q

How is endothelial cell structure relevant for angiogenesis?

A

Endothelial cells have a large nucleus and processes that envelop toward one another to create a lumenal space –> become a bv

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4
Q

Explain the process of angiogenesis.

A
  1. Selection of sprouting ECs: modulation of EC contacts, change in polarity
  2. Sprout outgrowth and guidance: maintenance of junctions, deposition of new ECM, EC proliferation
  3. Sprout fusion and lumen formation: stalk cell proliferation, vacuole formation and fusion, TIP cells encountering repulsion/adhesion
  4. Perfusion and maturation: stabilization of EC-EC adhesion, decrease EC proliferation
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5
Q

What is a signal for angiogenesis?

A

Hypoxia.

Tumor cells can sustain on their own for ~2 mm radius but then it needs to recruit more metabolic products

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6
Q

How does the signal to proliferate occur when a tumor gets large enough?

A

HIF-1alpha gets stimulated, dimerizes with HIF-1beta, goes to the nucleus and transcribes genes (VEGF: induces surrounding endothelial cells to start proliferating, migrate and go to tumor)

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7
Q

How does tumor vasculature differ from normal vasculature?

A

Tumor vasculature = Chaotic
They secrete many more growth factors than a normal endothelial cell
Tumor vessels do not have smooth muscle cells that surround them.
There are gaps in tumor vasculature used to leak out contents, escape and metastasize

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8
Q

How are the lymphatics different in tumor beds?

A

They aren’t working very well so there is a problem with intratumoral pressure – this can prevent the delivery of chemotherapeutics.

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9
Q

Why do only a subset of islet cells trigger angiogenesis?

A

Pancreatic islets have lots of VEGF at all times but are only angiogenic at late stages. MMP-9 is secreted by cells in bone marrow (mast cells, macrophages) and releases the VEGF and makes it available to tumor cells.

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10
Q

Name some common angiogenic activators.

A

VEGF, FGF-1

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11
Q

Name some common angiogenic inhibitors.

A

Thrombospondin, angiostatin, endostatin, collagen IV fragments

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12
Q

What is VEGF really good at?

A

Potent permeability inducer. 50,000 times more potent than histamine

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13
Q

What are two main VEGF receptors?

A

VEGF2: tyrosine phosphorylation residues, phenotype induced in cells d/t very specific regulation
VEGF3: Particularly on lymphatic vessels (lymphangiogenesis)

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14
Q

Explain the role of NOTCH.

A

NOTCH is tether in the cell and when cleaved it binds to ligands on other cells and leads to the intracellular domain entering the nucleus and turning on transcription. Plays a role in TIP-Stalk cell interaction.

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15
Q

What are some benefits of pursuing anti-angiogenic therapy?

A

You are targeting a genetically stable population (endothelial cells) and not a genetically unstable tumor cell.
Uses naturally occurring proteins in the body – high tolerance, less SE.
Easy accessibility for drugs – circulation.
Targets origin of metastasis

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16
Q

What are some of the different strategies to target VEGF?

A

Anti-VEGF antibodies (avastin) – used for ocular angiogenesis in macular degeneration.
Soluble VEGF receptors – binds to lianas with higher affinity than antibodies.
Small molecules to prevent signaling.
Peel off pericytes and target with PDGF inhibitor and cells are more sensitive to chemotherapy.

17
Q

What are some of the mechanisms of resistance to anti-angiogenic therapy?

A

Vascular mimicry – tumor cells start making their own vessels
All the cells that play a role in the tumor bed: endo, BM, ECM, pericyte, fibroblast, lymphatic cell, neutrophil, macrophage, mast cell etc – difficult to control/target all!