4.7 Review

Endothelial oxygen sensors regulate tumor vessel abnormalization by instructing phalanx endothelial cells

Journal

JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR MEDICINE-JMM
Volume 87, Issue 6, Pages 561-569

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00109-009-0482-z

Keywords

Tumor; Endothelium; Cancer; Angiogenesis

Funding

  1. Flemish Government
  2. Belgian Government, BELSPO [P60/30]
  3. FWO [G.0692.09]
  4. Belgian Foundation against Cancer, [GAO 2006/11-K.U]
  5. IWT PhD

Ask authors/readers for more resources

An ancestral function of vessels is to conduct blood flow and supply oxygen (O-2). In hypoxia, cells secrete angiogenic factors to initiate vessel sprouting. Angiogenic factors are balanced off by inhibitors, ensuring that vessels form optimally and supply sufficient oxygen (O-2). By contrast, in tumors, excessive production of angiogenic factors induces vessels and their endothelial cell (EC) layer to become highly abnormal, thereby impairing tumor perfusion and oxygenation. In such pathological conditions, angiogenic factors act as abnormalization factors and promote the vessel abnormalization switch. Recent genetic data indicate that ECs sense an imbalance in oxygen levels, by using the oxygen-sensing prolyl hydroxylase PHD2. In conditions of O-2 shortage, a decrease in PHD2 activity in ECs initiates a feedback that restores their shape, not their numbers. This induces ECs to align in a streamlined phalanx of tightly apposed, regularly ordered cobblestone ECs, which improves perfusion and oxygenation. As a result, EC normalization in PHD2 haplodeficient tumor vessels improves oxygenation and renders tumor cells less invasive and metastatic. This review discusses the role of PHD2 in the regulation of vessel (ab)normalization and the therapeutic potential of PHD2 inhibition for tumor invasiveness and metastasis.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available