4.7 Article

Angiogenesis with pericyte abnormalities in a transgenic model of prostate carcinoma

Journal

CANCER
Volume 104, Issue 10, Pages 2104-2115

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/cncr.21436

Keywords

immunohistochemistry; confocal microscopy; E-cadherin; platelet-derived growth factor receptor-beta; alpha-smooth muscle actin; vascular transformation

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Funding

  1. NCI NIH HHS [P50 CA90270] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NHLBI NIH HHS [P01 HL024136, HL-24136, HL-59157] Funding Source: Medline

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BACKGROUND. Previous studies of the TRansgenic Adenocarcinoma of the Mouse Prostate (TRAMP) model vasculature suggest that, as tumors develop, vessels invade the glandular epithelium. However, changes in the vasculature are difficult to study in conventional thin tissue sections. The authors used a new approach to characterize morphologic and architectural changes of blood vessels and pericytes during tumor development in TRAMP mice. METHODS. Eighty-micron cryostat sections of normal prostate and three histopathologic stages of TRAMP tumor sections, classified by epithelial cell E-cadherin immunoreactivity, were immunostained with vascular endothelial cell and pericyte receptor antibodies and evaluated by confocal microscopy. RESULTS. in the normal mouse prostate, capillaries were most abundant in the fibromuscular tunica between the epithelium and smooth muscle of the ductules. In the prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia (PIN) stage, vessels accompanied epithelial cell protrusions into the ductute lumen but remained in the connective tissue at the basal side of the epithelium. Well differentiated tissues had extensive angiogenesis with five times the normal mean vascularity outside ductules. Vessels were of variable diameter, were associated with an increased number of pericytes, and some had endothelial sprouts. Angiogenic blood vessels from poorly differentiated adenocarcinomas were tortuous, variable in caliber, and lacked the normal hierarchy. Pericytes on these vessels had an abnormal phenotype manifested by a-smooth muscle actin expression and loose association with endothelial cells. Angiogenesis and loss of vascular hierarchy were also found in human prostate carcinoma. CONCLUSIONS. Vascular abnormalities, which begin at the PIN stage and intensify in well differentiated and poorly differentiated tumors, may be useful readouts for early detection and treatment assessment in prostate carcinoma. (c) 2005 American Cancer Society.

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