Platelets actively sequester angiogenesis regulators

Giannoula Klement(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Tai‐Tung Yip, Flávia Cassiola(Boston Children's Museum), Lena Kikuchi(Boston Children's Museum), David Cervi(Boston Children's Museum), Vladimir N. Podust, Joseph E. Italiano(Brigham and Women's Hospital), E. M. Wheatley, Abdo Abou-Slaybi(Boston Children's Museum), Elise R. Bender(Boston Children's Museum), Nava Almog(Boston Children's Museum), Mark W. Kieran(Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), Judah Folkman(Boston Children's Museum)
Blood
November 26, 2008
Cited by 342Open Access
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Abstract

Clinical trials with antiangiogenic agents have not been able to validate plasma or serum levels of angiogenesis regulators as reliable markers of cancer presence or therapeutic response. We recently reported that platelets contain numerous proteins that regulate angiogenesis. We now show that accumulation of angiogenesis regulators in platelets of animals bearing malignant tumors exceeds significantly their concentration in plasma or serum, as well as their levels in platelets from non-tumor-bearing animals. This process is selective, as platelets do not take up a proportional amount of other plasma proteins (eg, albumin), even though these may be present at higher concentrations. We also find that VEGF-enriched Matrigel pellets implanted subcutaneously into mice or the minute quantities of VEGF secreted by microscopic subcutaneous tumors (0.5-1 mm(3)) result in an elevation of VEGF levels in platelets, without any changes in its plasma levels. The profile of other angiogenesis regulatory proteins (eg, platelet-derived growth factor, basic fibroblast growth factor) sequestered by platelets also reflects the presence of tumors in vivo before they can be macroscopically evident. The ability of platelets to selectively take up angiogenesis regulators in cancer-bearing hosts may have implications for the diagnosis and management of many angiogenesis-related diseases and provide a guide for antiangiogenic therapies.


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