Many cancers harbor oncogenic mutations of KRAS. Effectors mediating cancer progression, invasion, and metastasis in KRAS-mutated cancers are only incompletely understood. Here we identify cancer cell-expressed murine TRAIL-R, whose main function ascribed so far has been the induction of apoptosis as a crucial mediator of KRAS-driven cancer progression, invasion, and metastasis and in vivo Rac-1 activation. Cancer cell-restricted genetic ablation of murine TRAIL-R in autochthonous KRAS-driven models of non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) reduces tumor growth, blunts metastasis, and prolongs survival by inhibiting cancer cell-autonomous migration, proliferation, and invasion. Consistent with this, high TRAIL-R2 expression correlates with invasion of human PDAC into lymph vessels and with shortened metastasis-free survival of KRAS-mutated colorectal cancer patients.
Until recently, it was generally accepted that vascularization of tumors arises exclusively from endothelial sprouting. Whether circulating bone marrow-derived endothelial progenitor cells (EPC) participate in the progression of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) has not yet been evaluated. EPCs labeled with CD34, CD133, and vascular endothelial growth factor receptor-2 (VEGFR2) antibodies were counted by flow cytometry in the peripheral blood of 53 NSCLC patients. Furthermore, by means of a quantitative reverse transcription-PCR approach, we measured VEGFR2, CD133, CD34, and VE-cadherin mRNA in the peripheral blood samples of the same patient population. EPCs in tumor samples were identified by confocal microscopy using CD31, CD34, CD133, and VEGFR2 antibodies. Although immunofluorescent labeling of microvessels made clear that incorporation of EPCs is a rare phenomenon in NSCLC tissue (9 of 22 cases), circulating EPC levels before therapeutic intervention were increased in NSCLC patients (P < 0.002, versus healthy controls), and high pretreatment circulating EPC numbers correlated with poor overall survival (P < 0.001). Furthermore, in the subgroup of responders to treatment, the posttreatment EPC numbers in the peripheral blood were significantly lower compared with nonresponding patients. Interestingly, pretreatment mRNA levels of CD133, VE-cadherin, and CD34 were not significantly increased in NSCLC patients, whereas VEGFR2 expression was increased by 80-fold. Moreover, posttreatment VEGFR2 mRNA level in the peripheral blood was significantly higher in the subgroup of nonresponding patients when compared with posttreatment level of patients responding to antitumor therapy. Circulating levels of bone marrow-derived EPCs are significantly increased in NSCLC patients and correlate with clinical behavior. (Cancer Res 2006; 66(14): 7341-7)
This study reveals apelin as a novel angiogenic factor in human NSCLC. Moreover, it also provides the first evidence for a direct association of apelin expression with clinical outcome in a human cancer.
Purpose: Recent experimental studies have revealed that lymphangiogenesis plays an important role in cancer progression, but its clinical significance in the case of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) remains unclear. Our aim was to assess the lymphangiogenesis of human NSCLC, and to correlate this with angiogenic phenotype (angiogenic versus nonangiogenic growth pattern) and clinical behavior. Experimental Design: One hundred and three patients with NSCLC and complete follow-up information were included. Tumor samples were immunostained for vascular endothelial growth factor-C (VEGF-C), the lymphatic endothelial markers, LYVE-1 and D2-40/Podoplanin, and the panvascular marker, CD31. Lymphatic vessel density (LVD) and perimeters were evaluated within the tumor and peritumorally. Results: LVDs at the tumor periphery were significantly higher in lymph node metastatic tumors (P < 0.005) and high LVDs correlated with poor overall survival (P < 0.001). However, this tendency proved to be significant only in the angiogenic tumor group (P < 0.001). Although 68% of the patients with nonangiogenic tumors had lymph node metastasis (P = 0.0048 versus angiogenic tumors), in the patient group with nonangiogenic NSCLCs, there was no information from the LVDs in any investigated tumor area (P > 0.05). In contrast to angiogenic tumors, which had actively sprouting lymphatics in all of the investigated tumor areas, nonangiogenic tumors showed no Ki67 staining intratumorally. Conclusions: Our results reveal tumor lymphangiogenesis as a novel prognostic indicator for the risk of lymph node metastasis in NSCLC. Moreover, it also provides the first evidence that nonangiogenic NSCLCs mainly co-opt host tissue lymphatics during their growth, in contrast to most of the angiogenic tumors, which expand with concomitant lymphangiogenesis.
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