Islamabad, Dec
12 : A novel strategy of blocking the growth of blood vessels with
antibodies should result in improved treatment of cancerous tumors.
The
growth of new blood vessels from pre-existing vasculature is called
angiogenesis. In adults, angiogenesis occurs only during wound healing and
menstrual cycling, but is abundant and harmful in cancerous tumors and the
old-age eye disease frequently leading to blindness called age-related macular
degeneration (AMD). Without the formation of new blood vessels, tumors cannot
grow beyond a small size due to lack of oxygen and nutrients. Inhibition of
angiogenesis is used in the treatment of cancer and AMD, but not all cancer
patients respond, while others become refractory to therapy.
Academy
professor Kari Alitalo and co-workers at the University of Helsinki, Finland,
have previously shown that antibodies directed towards vascular endothelial
growth factor receptor (VEGFR)-3, found on the surface of endothelial cells
lining vessels, can inhibit lymphatic metastasis by 50-70% in preclinical tumor
models. Furthermore, antibodies that inhibited the growth factor VEGF-C from
binding to the VEGFR-3 suppressed angiogenesis. However, the trouble with this
type of inhibitors is that they work poorly in high growth factor
concentrations, when the growth factor easily outcompetes the inhibitor. Also
the delivery of drugs into tumors is hampered by erratic blood flow and high
tumor pressure, which may prevent sufficient amounts of the inhibitor from
reaching its target within the tumor.
The novel type of VEGFR-3 blocking
antibody has an unprecedented mechanism of action, which was effective even at
very high concentrations of the VEGF-C growth factor. Importantly, the authors
showed that combined use of antibodies blocking growth factor binding VEGFR-3
dimerization provided not only an additive, but rather a synergistic
inhibition.
"The new dimerization inhibitor unveils a biologically
meaningful rationale for suppressing angiogenesis in tumors that could
outperform traditional competitive inhibitors of angiogenesis in tumor therapy.
These findings should translate into improved anti-angiogenic and
anti-lymphangiogenic tumor therapies," says Professor
Alitalo.
Ends
SA/EN
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Double block of blood vessels to starve cancerous tumors
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