Tumor VEGF:VEGFR2 autocrine feed-forward loop triggers angiogenesis in lung cancer

Sampurna Chatterjee(Max Planck Institute for Metabolism Research), Lukas C. Heukamp(University Hospital Cologne), Maike Siobal(Max Planck Institute for Metabolism Research), Jakob Schöttle(Max Planck Institute for Metabolism Research), Caroline Wieczorek(Max Planck Institute for Metabolism Research), Martin Peifer(Max Planck Institute for Metabolism Research), Davide Frasca(University Hospital Cologne), Mirjam Koker(Max Planck Institute for Metabolism Research), Katharina König(University Hospital Cologne), Lydia Meder(University Hospital Cologne), Daniel Rauh(TU Dortmund University), Reinhard Buettner(University Hospital Cologne), Jürgen Wolf(University Hospital Cologne), Rolf A. Brekken(The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center), Bernd Neumaier(Max Planck Institute for Metabolism Research), Gerhard Christofori(Department of Biomedicine Basel), Roman K. Thomas(TU Dortmund University), Roland T. Ullrich(Max Planck Institute for Metabolism Research)
Journal of Clinical Investigation
March 1, 2013
Cited by 193Open Access
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Abstract

The molecular mechanisms that control the balance between antiangiogenic and proangiogenic factors and initiate the angiogenic switch in tumors remain poorly defined. By combining chemical genetics with multimodal imaging, we have identified an autocrine feed-forward loop in tumor cells in which tumor-derived VEGF stimulates VEGF production via VEGFR2-dependent activation of mTOR, substantially amplifying the initial proangiogenic signal. Disruption of this feed-forward loop by chemical perturbation or knockdown of VEGFR2 in tumor cells dramatically inhibited production of VEGF in vitro and in vivo. This disruption was sufficient to prevent tumor growth in vivo. In patients with lung cancer, we found that this VEGF:VEGFR2 feed-forward loop was active, as the level of VEGF/VEGFR2 binding in tumor cells was highly correlated to tumor angiogenesis. We further demonstrated that inhibition of tumor cell VEGFR2 induces feedback activation of the IRS/MAPK signaling cascade. Most strikingly, combined pharmacological inhibition of VEGFR2 (ZD6474) and MEK (PD0325901) in tumor cells resulted in dramatic tumor shrinkage, whereas monotherapy only modestly slowed tumor growth. Thus, a tumor cell-autonomous VEGF:VEGFR2 feed-forward loop provides signal amplification required for the establishment of fully angiogenic tumors in lung cancer. Interrupting this feed-forward loop switches tumor cells from an angiogenic to a proliferative phenotype that sensitizes tumor cells to MAPK inhibition.


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