4.5 Article

Soluble Vegfr3 gene therapy suppresses multi-organ metastasis in a mouse mammary cancer model

Journal

CANCER SCIENCE
Volume 111, Issue 8, Pages 2837-2849

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/cas.14531

Keywords

anti-metastasis; antitumor; mammary cancer; multi-organ metastasis; soluble VEGFR-3

Categories

Funding

  1. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology of Japan [21591682]
  2. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [21591682] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Accumulating evidence on the association of VEGF-C with lymphangiogenesis and lymph node metastasis implicates lymphatic vessels as a potential target in anti-cancer therapy. To evaluate whether blocking VEGF-C and VEGFR-3 signaling can inhibit multi-organ metastases, a mouse metastatic mammary cancer model was subjected to gene therapy using a soluble VEGFR-3 expression vector (psVEGFR-3). We showed that psVEGFR-3 significantly diminished cell growth in vitro with or without added VEGF-C, and significantly reduced primary tumor growth and tumor metastases to wide-spectrum organs in vivo. Although apoptotic cell death and angiogenesis levels did not differ between the control and psVEGFR-3 groups, cell proliferation and lymphangiogenesis in the mammary tumors were significantly decreased in the psVEGFR-3 group. Furthermore, lymphatic vessel invasion was significantly inhibited in this group. Real-time RT-PCR analysis revealed significantly high expression of theVegfr3gene due to gene therapy, and the transcriptional levels ofPcnaandLyve1tended to decrease in the psVEGFR-3 group. Immunofluorescence staining indicated that phospho-tyrosine expression was considerably lower in tumor cells of psVEGFR-3-treated mammary carcinomas than those of control tumors. Double immunofluorescence staining indicated that phospho-tyrosine(+)/LYVE-1(+)(a lymphatic vessel marker) tended to decrease in psVEGFR-3-treated mammary carcinomas compared with control mice, indicating a decline in the activity of the VEGF-C/VEGFR-3 axis. These findings showed that a blockade of VEGF-C/VEGFR-3 signaling caused by sVEGFR-3 sequestered VEGF-C and prevented the side-effects of anti-angiogenesis and suppressed overall metastases, suggesting their high clinical significance.

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