4.7 Article

Apelin inhibition prevents resistance and metastasis associated with anti-angiogenic therapy

Journal

EMBO MOLECULAR MEDICINE
Volume 11, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.15252/emmm.201809266

Keywords

anti-angiogenic therapy; Apelin-Apelin receptor; therapy-induced resistance; tumor angiogenesis; VEGF-VEGFR

Funding

  1. EMBO Long-term Fellowship
  2. Marie Curie Fellowship from the European Commission
  3. T. von Zastrow foundation
  4. Hungarian National Research, Development and Innovation Office [K109626, KNN121510, PD111656]
  5. Janos Bolyai Research Scholarship of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences
  6. IMBA
  7. Austrian Ministry of Sciences
  8. Austrian Academy of Sciences
  9. Era of Hope Innovator award
  10. ERC Advanced Grant

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Angiogenesis is a hallmark of cancer, promoting growth and metastasis. Anti-angiogenic treatment has limited efficacy due to therapy-induced blood vessel alterations, often followed by local hypoxia, tumor adaptation, progression, and metastasis. It is therefore paramount to overcome therapy-induced resistance. We show that Apelin inhibition potently remodels the tumor microenvironment, reducing angiogenesis, and effectively blunting tumor growth. Functionally, targeting Apelin improves vessel function and reduces polymorphonuclear myeloid-derived suppressor cell infiltration. Importantly, in mammary and lung cancer, Apelin prevents resistance to anti-angiogenic receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK) inhibitor therapy, reducing growth and angiogenesis in lung and breast cancer models without increased hypoxia in the tumor microenvironment. Apelin blockage also prevents RTK inhibitor-induced metastases, and high Apelin levels correlate with poor prognosis of anti-angiogenic therapy patients. These data identify a druggable anti-angiogenic drug target that reduces tumor blood vessel densities and normalizes the tumor vasculature to decrease metastases.

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