Publication | Closed Access
Vascular endothelial growth factor is essential for initial but not continued in vivo growth of human breast carcinoma cells.
206
Citations
12
References
1997
Year
Breast OncologyImmunologyPathologyTumor BiologyAngiogenesisGrowth FactorCancer Cell BiologyFibroblast Growth FactorCancer ResearchEndothelial Cell PathobiologyTumor GrowthVascular BiologyNeovascularizationVascular Endothelial Growth FactorCell BiologyTumor MicroenvironmentVegf SuppressionVivo GrowthBreast CancerMedicineCancer Growth
In this study, we used a self-contained tetracycline-regulated retroviral vector system to elucidate the role of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) in controlling s.c. growth of human T-47D breast carcinoma cells. VEGF expression was tightly regulated by this system, both in vitro and in nude mouse xenografts. A 2.4-fold increase in tumor volume was associated with VEGF overexpression. Tumor growth was almost completely inhibited when VEGF was suppressed from the time of T-47D cell inoculation, and a 6-fold reduction in tumor volume was observed when VEGF suppression was started in 175-mm3 tumors. However, no growth inhibition was observed when VEGF suppression was started in 820-mm3 tumors. In these tumors, basic fibroblast growth factor and transforming growth factor alpha RNA expression was detected after VEGF was switched off. These findings demonstrate that VEGF is critical for the initial s.c. growth of T-47D breast carcinoma cells, whereas other angiogenic factors can compensate for the loss of VEGF after the tumors have reached a certain size.
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