Angiostatin generation by human tumor cell lines: Involvement of plasminogen activators
โ Scribed by Johan R. Westphal; Rianne Van't Hullenaar; Anneke Geurts-Moespot; Fred C.J.G. Sweep; Jan H. Verheijen; Marion M.G. Bussemakers; Jon Askaa; Inge Clemmensen; Alexander A.M. Eggermont; Dirk J. Ruiter; Robert M.W. De Waal
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- French
- Weight
- 214 KB
- Volume
- 86
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0020-7136
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โฆ Synopsis
Angiostatin is a tumor-derived angiogenesis inhibitor consisting of an internal fragment of plasminogen. Little is known about the production of angiostatin by human tumors. In this study, we examined the in vitro angiostatingenerating capacities of a panel of human tumor cell lines (total n โซุโฌ 75) and the proteolytic molecule(s) involved. Angiostatin formation was determined by assessing the level of plasminogen digestion in conditioned medium by Westernblot analysis. We found that the capacity to produce angiostatin is a common feature of many cell lines, depending on the tumor type. All 6 bladder-carcinoma and 6 out of 7 prostate-carcinoma cell lines showed intermediate to potent angiostatin-generating activity. In contrast, only 2 out of 7 colon-carcinoma and 2 out of 9 renal-cell carcinoma cell lines were able to generate angiostatin at intermediate levels. Out of 25 melanoma cell lines, only one line failed to generate angiostatin. In the other cell-line groups (cervix, breast and ovary), angiostatin formation varied. Remarkably, angiostatin bands were not of equal size in all plasminogen digests. Since reported data have indicated that plasminogen activators (uPA and tPA) were able to excise the angiostatin fragment from the plasminogen parent molecule via plasmin generation, we determined levels of uPA and tPA and PAI-1 antigen in the conditioned media, and correlated the results with angiostatin-generating capacity. Whereas prostate-and bladder-carcinoma lines capable of generating high levels of angiostatin showed high uPA levels, angiostatin generation in melanoma cell lines was correlated with tPA levels. Generally, angiostatin non-producers did not express uPA or tPA. In 6 out of 75 cell lines, however, we found angiostatin generation combined with low or absent levels of plasminogen activator, suggesting the involvement of alternative proteolytic pathways in the generation of angiostatin. Int.
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