Autocrine VEGF–VEGFR2–Neuropilin-1 signaling promotes glioma stem-like cell viability and tumor growth

Petra Hamerlik(Institute of Molecular and Translational Medicine), Justin D. Lathia(Cleveland Clinic), Rikke Rasmussen(Danish Cancer Society), Qiulian Wu(Cleveland Clinic), Jiřina Bártková(Danish Cancer Society), Myung‐Hee Lee(Danish Cancer Society), Pavel Moudrý(Czech Academy of Sciences, Institute of Molecular Genetics), Jir̂í Bártek(Karolinska University Hospital), Walter Fischer(Rigshospitalet), Jiri Lukas(Danish Cancer Society), Jeremy N. Rich(Cleveland Clinic), Jir̂í Bártek(Karolinska University Hospital)
The Journal of Experimental Medicine
March 5, 2012
Cited by 402Open Access
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Abstract

Although vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) receptor 2 (VEGFR2) is traditionally regarded as an endothelial cell protein, evidence suggests that VEGFRs may be expressed by cancer cells. Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is a lethal cancer characterized by florid vascularization and aberrantly elevated VEGF. Antiangiogenic therapy with the humanized VEGF antibody bevacizumab reduces GBM tumor growth; however, the clinical benefits are transient and invariably followed by tumor recurrence. In this study, we show that VEGFR2 is preferentially expressed on the cell surface of the CD133(+) human glioma stem-like cells (GSCs), whose viability, self-renewal, and tumorigenicity rely, at least in part, on signaling through the VEGF-VEGFR2-Neuropilin-1 (NRP1) axis. We find that the limited impact of bevacizumab-mediated VEGF blockage may reflect ongoing autocrine signaling through VEGF-VEGFR2-NRP1, which is associated with VEGFR2-NRP1 recycling and a pool of active VEGFR2 within a cytosolic compartment of a subset of human GBM cells. Whereas bevacizumab failed to inhibit prosurvival effects of VEGFR2-mediated signaling, GSC viability under unperturbed or radiation-evoked stress conditions was attenuated by direct inhibition of VEGFR2 tyrosine kinase activity and/or shRNA-mediated knockdown of VEGFR2 or NRP1. We propose that direct inhibition of VEGFR2 kinase may block the highly dynamic VEGF-VEGFR2-NRP1 pathway and inspire a GBM treatment strategy to complement the currently prevalent ligand neutralization approach.


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