Dose-dependent effects of platelet-derived growth factor-B on glial tumorigenesis

AH Shih, C Dai, X Hu, MK Rosenblum, JA Koutcher… - Cancer research, 2004 - AACR
AH Shih, C Dai, X Hu, MK Rosenblum, JA Koutcher, EC Holland
Cancer research, 2004AACR
Platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) is expressed in many different tumors, but its precise
roles in tumorigenesis remain to be fully defined. Here, we report on a mouse model that
demonstrates dose-dependent effects of PDGF-B on glial tumorigenesis. By removing
inhibitory regulatory elements in the PDGFB mRNA, we are able to substantially elevate its
expression in tumor cells using a retroviral delivery system. This elevation in PDGF-B
production results in tumors with shortened latency, increased cellularity, regions of …
Abstract
Platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) is expressed in many different tumors, but its precise roles in tumorigenesis remain to be fully defined. Here, we report on a mouse model that demonstrates dose-dependent effects of PDGF-B on glial tumorigenesis. By removing inhibitory regulatory elements in the PDGFB mRNA, we are able to substantially elevate its expression in tumor cells using a retroviral delivery system. This elevation in PDGF-B production results in tumors with shortened latency, increased cellularity, regions of necrosis, and general high-grade character. In addition, elevated PDGF-B in these tumors also mediates vascular smooth muscle cell recruitment that supports tumor angiogenesis. PDGF receptor (PDGFR) signaling appears to be required for the maintenance of these high-grade characteristics, because treatment of high-grade tumors with a small molecule inhibitor of PDGFR results in reversion to a lower grade tumor histology. Our data show that PDGFR signaling quantitatively regulates tumor grade and is required to sustain high-grade oligodendrogliomas.
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