Glioblastoma, the most common and lethal form of brain cancer and the disease that killed Massachusetts Senator Ted Kennedy, resists nearly all treatment efforts, even when attacked simultaneously on several fronts. One explanation can be found in the tumour cells' unexpected flexibility, discovered researchers at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies.
When faced with a life-threatening oxygen shortage, glioblastoma cells can shift gears and morph into blood vessels to ensure the continued supply of nutrients, reports a team led by Inder Verma, Ph.D., in a feature article in this week's issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Their study not only explains why cancer treatments that target angiogenesis—the growth of a network of blood vessels that supplies nutrients and oxygen to cancerous tissues—routinely fail in glioblastoma, but the findings may also spur the development of drugs aimed at novel targets.
"This surprising effect of anti-angiogenic therapy with drugs such as Avastin tells us that we have to rethink glioblastoma combination therapy," says senior author Verma, a professor in the Laboratory of Genetics and holder of the Irwin and Joan Jacobs Chair in Exemplary Life Science. "Disrupting the formation of tumour blood vessels is not enough; we also have to prevent the conversion of tumour cells into blood vessels cells."
To grow beyond one to two millimeters in diameter—roughly the size of a pinhead—tumours need their own independent blood supply. To recruit new vasculature from existing blood vessels, many tumours overexpress growth factors, predominantly vascular endothelial growth factor, or VEGF. This led to the development of Avastin, a monoclonal antibody that intercepts VEGF.
"In a recent phase II clinical trial, 60 percent of patients with glioblastoma responded to a combination of Avastin and Irinotecan, which directly interferes with the growth of cancer cells," explains Verma, "but in most patients this effect was only transient." In fact, studies have shown that tumour cells often become more aggressive after anti-angiogenic therapy, but the reason had been unclear.
To find out, postdoctoral researcher and first author Yasushi Soda, Ph.D., took advantage of a mouse model of glioblastoma that recapitulates the development and progression of human brain tumours that arise naturally. "The tumours in these mice closely resemble glioblastomas, including the typically messy and highly permeable tumour vessels, which allowed us to study the tumour vasculature in great detail," he explains.
The glioblastoma mice, the concept for which was developed in the Verma laboratory, grow brain tumours within a few months of being injected with viruses that carry activated oncogenes and a marker gene that causes all tumour-derived cells to glow green under ultraviolet light. By simply tracking the green glow under the microscope, the Salk researchers can then follow the fate of tumour cells.
When Soda peered at the tumour cells, he found—much to his surprise—that about 30 percent of vascular endothelial cells—specialized cells that line the interior surface of blood vessels—appeared green. "This indicated to us that they most likely originated from tumour cells," he says.
Further experiments revealed that TDECs, short for tumour-derived endothelial cells, are not specific to mouse tumours but can also be found in clinical samples taken from human glioblastoma patients. "This was really strong evidence for us that glioblastoma cells routinely transdifferentiate into endothelial cells," he explains.
The transformation is triggered by hypoxia, or low oxygen levels, which signals tumour cells that the time has come to start their shape-shifting stunt. But unlike regular vascular endothelial cells, TDECs don't require VEGF to form functional blood vessels. "This might explain why, despite being initially successful, anti-angiogenic therapy ultimately fails in glioblastomas," says Verma.
Avastin interrupts normal blood vessels, but eventually they are replaced with tumour-derived vessels, which are now treatment-resistant. "Once again, we are confronted with the versatility of tumour cells, which allows them to survive and thrive under adverse conditions," says Verma. "But as we learn more about tumours' molecular flexibility, we will be able to design novel, tailor-made combination therapies to combat deadly brain tumours."
Researchers who also contributed to the work include Tomotoshi Marumoto, Dinorah Friedmann-Morvinski, Mie Soda, and Fei Liu at the Salk Institute; Hiroyuki Michiue in the Department of Physiology at the Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences; Sandra Pastorino and Santosh Kesari in the Department of Neurosciences, Moore's Cancer Center, at the University of California, San Diego; as well as Meng Yang and Robert M. Hoffmann at AntiCancer, Inc., San Diego.
The work was funded in part by the National Institutes of Health, the Merieux Foundation, the Ellison Medical Foundation, Ipsen/Biomeasure, Sanofi Aventis, the H.N. and Frances C. Berger Foundation, and the James S. McDonnell Foundation.
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