4.5 Article

Inhibition of Nodal suppresses angiogenesis and growth of human gliomas

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEURO-ONCOLOGY
Volume 104, Issue 1, Pages 21-31

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11060-010-0467-3

Keywords

CD31; ERK1/2; HIF-1 alpha; Nodal; RNA interference; VEGF

Funding

  1. Tri-Service General Hospital [TSGH-C99-072, TSGH-C99-073, TSGH-C99-074, TSGH-C99-149]
  2. Teh-Tzer Study Group for Human Medical Research Foundation [B971113]
  3. Advancement of Education, Sciences and Medicine
  4. Taiwan Department of Health for Taipei Medical University-the Center of Excellence for Clinical Trial and Research in Neuroscience [DOH99-TD-B-111-003, DOH99-TD-C-111-008]
  5. Center of Excellence for Cancer Research
  6. National Research Program for Genomic Medicine, National Science Council [NSC95-3112-B-001-009]

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Angiogenesis is the hallmark of malignant gliomas positively correlated with the vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) expression. We previously reported that expression levels of Nodal, a member of transforming growth factor-beta super family, correlate with the malignant invasive behavior of human glioma cells. In this study, we show that knockdown of Nodal suppresses glioma angiogenesis by inhibition of VEGF. In human primary glioma specimens, expression of Nodal positively correlates with WHO glioma tumor grades and expression of VEGF in the corresponding glioma specimens. In human U87MG glioma cells, knockdown of endogenous Nodal by RNA interference (RNAi) significantly decreases colony formation and secretion of VEGF. In vivo, cellular depletion of Nodal in U87MG inhibited brain glioma growth and prolonged the survival of mice with U87MG/shNodal glioma compared with controls. Inhibition of Nodal suppressed tumor vessel growth in U87MG gliomas. Using Nodal inhibitor (SB431542), silencing Nodal, or overexpressing Nodal in the U87MG, GBM8401, and GBM glioma cells, our further experiments revealed that Nodal-induced VEGF expression might, at least in part, mediate through the ERK1/2-HIF-1 alpha-mediated signaling pathway. Taken together, our data revealed that alteration of Nodal expression in glioma cells resulted in changes to VEGF secretion, and subsequent colony formation, in vivo tumor growth, and angiogenesis, all of which are consistent with the regulation of VEGF through the ERK1/2-HIF-1 alpha-mediated signaling, suggesting that Nodal may serve as a potential therapeutic target for the treatment of human gliomas.

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