α<i>v</i>‐Integrin antagonist EMD 121974 induces apoptosis in brain tumor cells growing on vitronectin and tenascin

Takashi Taga(Children's Hospital of Los Angeles), Atsushi Suzuki(Children's Hospital of Los Angeles), Ignacio González-Gómez(University of Southern California), Floyd H. Gilles(University of Southern California), Monique F. Stins(Children's Hospital of Los Angeles), Hiroyuki Shimada(University of Southern California), Lora W. Barsky(Children's Hospital of Los Angeles), Kenneth I. Weinberg(Children's Hospital of Los Angeles), Walter E. Laug(Children's Hospital of Los Angeles)
International Journal of Cancer
January 31, 2002
Cited by 196Open Access
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Abstract

Orthotopic brain tumor growth is inhibited in athymic mice by the daily systemic administration of the alpha v-integrin antagonist EMD 121974. This compound, a cyclic RGD-penta-peptide, is a potent inhibitor of angiogenesis, which induces apoptosis of growing endothelial cells through inhibition of their alpha v-integrin interaction with the matrix proteins vitronectin and tenascin. Here we show that EMD 121974 also induces apoptosis in the alpha v-integrin-expressing tumor cell lines U87 MG and DAOY by detaching them from vitronectin and tenascin, matrix proteins known to be essential for brain tumor growth and invasion. These matrix proteins are shown to be produced by the brain tumor cells in vitro and in vivo. Furthermore, only tumor cells expressing alpha v-integrins responded to the treatment with EMD 121974, after xenotransplantation into the forebrain of nude mice, supporting the importance of tumor cell-matrix interactions in tumor cell survival in the brain. Thus, the alpha v-antagonist EMD 121974 suppresses brain tumor growth through induction of apoptosis in both brain capillary and brain tumor cells by preventing their interaction with the matrix proteins vitronectin and tenascin. The dual action of this peptide explains its potent growth suppression of orthotopically transplanted brain tumors.


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