MODULATION OF VASCULAR ENDOTHELIAL GROWTH FACTOR AND INTERLEUKIN-8 BY CARBOXYAMIDOTRIAZOLE IN MELANOMA CELLS

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Hood College Biology

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Biomedical and Environmental Science

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Abstract

Angiogenesis, the development of new blood vessels, is required for proliferation and growth of tumors and has now become an important target for cancer chemotherapeutics. The synthetic compound carboxyamido-triazole (CAI) has been demonstrated to be an anti-angiogenic agent and is currently in Phase II trials at the National Cancer Institute in patients with refractory ovarian cancers. CAI inhibits calcium influx through nonvoltage and voltage-gated calcium channels and subsequent down regulation of calcium-dependent signal transduction cascades. The current study was undertaken to examine the effect of CAI on melanoma cells in vitro and in vivo and determine a possible mechanism by which CAI acts. In vivo studies demonstrate an 89% reduction in melanoma tumor volume and confirm its anti-angiogenic effect by showing a reduced number of endothelial cells in CAI-treated tumors versus control tumors. In vivo analysis demonstrated that CAI reduced secretion of the proangiogenic cytokines vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and interleukin-8 (IL-8) in A2058 human melanoma xenografts by 56% and 88%, respectively. In an effort to elucidate the possible mechanism for the role of CAI in reducing melanoma growth, in vitro investigation was employed. Two important conditions of the tumor environment were explored: acidosis and relative hypoxia. A marked reduction in secreted VEGF was measured under hypoxic-like conditions at either neutral or acidic pH following CAI treatment (P=0.0003 and P=0.0006, respectively). Protein expression was similarly affected; however, mRNA expression showed a greater reduction under normoxic-like conditions. Expression of hypoxia inducible factor-1 alpha (HIF-1α), a transcriptional regulator of VEGF, was reduced under hypoxic like conditions after CAI treatment, but no significant inhibition was observed during normoxic conditions. Secretion and expression of IL-8 demonstrated a contradictory result to the in vivo data but correlated with a statistically significant CAI dose-dependent decrease in culture pH. Examination of endothelial migration showed that the presence of CAI alone could inhibit both basal unstimulated or VEGF-stimulated migration, and this effect was further enhanced when cells were pre-exposed to CAI. These observations demonstrate a role for CAI in the disruption between the tumor and host microenvironment leading to reduced tumor production and secretion of proangiogenic cytokines and endothelial cell response to VEGF.