| August 29, 2004
Advances in Tumor Angiogenesis
—
Dendritic Cells Co-opted to the Dark Side
Immune Cells Transform into Blood-Vessel Cells
in Ovarian Cancer
(Philadelphia, PA) - Researchers at the University
of Pennsylvania School of Medicine discovered
that in ovarian cancer immune cells can change into
blood-vessel cells, and eventually promote the life-sustaining
vasculature of the tumor. These findings were initially
observed in a mouse model of ovarian cancer that the
investigators generated and then confirmed in human
ovarian cancer. This work may lead to new approaches
to fighting solid tumors.
George Coukos, MD, PhD, and his team,
Jose Conejo-Garcia, MD, PhD, and Fabian
Benencia, PhD, all investigators in the Abramson
Cancer Center and the Center for Research
in Women's Health and Reproduction, report
their findings in this week’s online publication
and the September issue of Nature Medicine.
“These results clearly deal with ovarian cancer,
but we think that the concept is applicable to solid
tumors in general,” says Coukos. Ovarian cancer
is the leading killer among gynecologic cancers, causing
about 25,000 new cases a year and about 15,000 deaths
annually in the U.S. “One of the problems is that
it’s diagnosed late and we don’t have effective
treatments for it.
“Dendritic
cells play a central role in the generation of antitumor
immune response,” says Coukos. “As a result,
it was believed that these were mostly good players
in inducing tumor rejection.” But when dendritic
cells are part of the tumor microenvironment, instead
of stimulating an immune response, they deviate from
the program and are co-opted into tumor angiogenesis.
“When the dendritic cell precursors are put in
the tumor context they form blood vessels that are functional,”
notes Conejo-Garcia. In a mouse model in which ovarian
tumors expressed high amounts of the proteins beta-defensin
and VEGF-A, dendritic cell precursors were attracted
to the tumor, where they turned into an endothelial-like
cell type.(Click on thumbnail above to view full-size
image). Endothelial cells are the cells forming the
inner lining of blood vessels. They are critical for
building tumor blood vessels and promoting tumor growth.
For tumors to survive there needs to be a balance between
factors that promote tumor growth such as angiogenesis
and factors that control tumor growth such as immune
response. Researchers have always considered these as
two separate systems. “The breakthrough that this
work provides is that there is indeed a tremendous interaction
between these processes,” says Coukos.
VEGF-A is the key for the transformation of dendritic
cells, according to this study. VEGF proteins are ligands
produced in the tumor that induce survival and proliferation
of endothelial cells. When VEGF-A is overexpressed in
tumors, dendritic cells change into endothelial cells,
but in the absence of high VEGF-A levels or when VEGF-A
is inhibited, the tendency of dendritic cells to convert
is reversed. “I think what is fascinating in terms
of biology is the plasticity that this cell has depending
on its microenvironment,” says Benencia.
It is well established that VEGF-A is the master switch
for tumor angiogenesis, with a dose-dependent effect:
in this case, dendritic cells were converted into endothelial-like
cells only in the presence of high VEGF-A levels. “The
levels of VEGF-A generated in our animal model of ovarian
cancer resemble those seen in human ovarian cancer,”
says Coukos. “We have recapitulated what happens
in human tumors.” Thus, VEGF promotes tumor growth
not only through angiogenesis but also through suppression
of antitumor immune response, because these dendritic
cells lose their ability to induce tumor rejection,
which in turn may explain why some tumors are tolerated
immunologically.
“We are the first to show that dendritic cell
precursors in tumors build blood vessels,” says
Coukos. “This has previously been seen in
vitro, where others have shown that monocytes or
dendritic cells can turn into something that looks like
endothelial cells, but no one has been able to demonstrate
that this could happen in vivo and show its contribution
to pathology and physiology.”
The work has also revealed that the bone marrow - via
dendritic cell precursors, which are produced in the
marrow - is involved in angiogenesis. This observation
raises clinically important questions as to the effects
of supporting the bone marrow with growth factors during
chemotherapy. Dendritic cells have surface molecules
called CCR6, which are receptors for beta defensins
and other molecules with chemoattracting properties.
The team discovered that beta-defensins produced by
the tumor attract dendritic cells to the tumor and thus
contribute to angiogenesis. The team injected an antibody
to CCR6 with an attached toxin that inactivates ribosomes.
The toxin is internalized only by cells expressing CCR6,
ultimately resulting in cell death. Selective killing
of CCR6-expressing cells led tumors to shrink. “This
has opened a door to a new therapeutic approach, which
was not envisioned before,” says Coukos.
Other members of the research team are Penn colleagues
Maria-Cecilia Courreges, Eugene Kang, Alisha Mohamed-Hadley,
Ronald J. Buckanovich, David O. Holtz, Ann Jenkins,
Hana Na, Lin Zhang, Daniel Wagner, and Richard Caroll,
as well as Dionyssios Katsaros from the University of
Turin, Italy. This research was funded by the National
Cancer Institute, the Ovarian Cancer SPORE Grant, the
Abramson Family Cancer Research Institute, the Sidney
Kimmel Foundation, and the Ovarian Cancer Research Fund.
For
a printer friendly version of this release,
click
here.
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