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Failure of anti tumor-derived endothelial cell immunotherapy depends on augmentation of tumor hypoxia

We have previously demonstrated that Tenascin-C (TNC)(+) human neuroblastoma (NB) cells transdifferentiate into tumor-derived endothelial cells (TDEC), which have been detected both in primary tumors and in tumors formed by human NB cell lines in immunodeficient mice. TDEC are genetically unstable a...

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Autores principales: Pezzolo, Annalisa, Marimpietri, Danilo, Raffaghello, Lizzia, Cocco, Claudia, Pistorio, Angela, Gambini, Claudio, Cilli, Michele, Horenstein, Alberto, Malavasi, Fabio, Pistoia, Vito
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4279379/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25362644
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author Pezzolo, Annalisa
Marimpietri, Danilo
Raffaghello, Lizzia
Cocco, Claudia
Pistorio, Angela
Gambini, Claudio
Cilli, Michele
Horenstein, Alberto
Malavasi, Fabio
Pistoia, Vito
author_facet Pezzolo, Annalisa
Marimpietri, Danilo
Raffaghello, Lizzia
Cocco, Claudia
Pistorio, Angela
Gambini, Claudio
Cilli, Michele
Horenstein, Alberto
Malavasi, Fabio
Pistoia, Vito
author_sort Pezzolo, Annalisa
collection PubMed
description We have previously demonstrated that Tenascin-C (TNC)(+) human neuroblastoma (NB) cells transdifferentiate into tumor-derived endothelial cells (TDEC), which have been detected both in primary tumors and in tumors formed by human NB cell lines in immunodeficient mice. TDEC are genetically unstable and may favor tumor progression, suggesting that their elimination could reduce tumor growth and dissemination. So far, TDEC have never been targeted by antibody-mediated immunotherapy in any of the tumor models investigated. To address this issue, immunodeficient mice carrying orthotopic NB formed by the HTLA-230 human cell line were treated with TDEC-targeting cytotoxic human (h)CD31, that spares host-derived endothelial cells, or isotype-matched mAbs. hCD31 mAb treatment did not affect survival of NB-bearing mice, but increased significantly hypoxia in tumor microenvironment, where apoptotic and proliferating TDEC coexisted, indicating the occurrence of vascular remodeling. Tumor cells from hCD31 mAb treated mice showed i) up-regulation of epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT)-related and vascular mimicry (VM)-related gene expression, ii) expression of endothelial (i.e. CD31 and VE-cadherin) and EMT-associated (i.e. Twist-1, N-cadherin and TNC) immunophenotypic markers, and iii) up-regulation of high mobility group box-1 (HMGB-1) expression. In vitro experiments with two NB cell lines showed that hypoxia was the common driver of all the above phenomena and that human recombinant HMGB-1 amplified EMT and TDEC trans-differentiation. In conclusion, TDEC targeting with hCD31 mAb increases tumor hypoxia, setting the stage for the occurrence of EMT and of new waves of TDEC trans-differentiation. These adaptive responses to the changes induced by immunotherapy in the tumor microenvironment allow tumor cells to escape from the effects of hCD31 mAb.
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spelling pubmed-42793792015-01-06 Failure of anti tumor-derived endothelial cell immunotherapy depends on augmentation of tumor hypoxia Pezzolo, Annalisa Marimpietri, Danilo Raffaghello, Lizzia Cocco, Claudia Pistorio, Angela Gambini, Claudio Cilli, Michele Horenstein, Alberto Malavasi, Fabio Pistoia, Vito Oncotarget Research Paper We have previously demonstrated that Tenascin-C (TNC)(+) human neuroblastoma (NB) cells transdifferentiate into tumor-derived endothelial cells (TDEC), which have been detected both in primary tumors and in tumors formed by human NB cell lines in immunodeficient mice. TDEC are genetically unstable and may favor tumor progression, suggesting that their elimination could reduce tumor growth and dissemination. So far, TDEC have never been targeted by antibody-mediated immunotherapy in any of the tumor models investigated. To address this issue, immunodeficient mice carrying orthotopic NB formed by the HTLA-230 human cell line were treated with TDEC-targeting cytotoxic human (h)CD31, that spares host-derived endothelial cells, or isotype-matched mAbs. hCD31 mAb treatment did not affect survival of NB-bearing mice, but increased significantly hypoxia in tumor microenvironment, where apoptotic and proliferating TDEC coexisted, indicating the occurrence of vascular remodeling. Tumor cells from hCD31 mAb treated mice showed i) up-regulation of epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT)-related and vascular mimicry (VM)-related gene expression, ii) expression of endothelial (i.e. CD31 and VE-cadherin) and EMT-associated (i.e. Twist-1, N-cadherin and TNC) immunophenotypic markers, and iii) up-regulation of high mobility group box-1 (HMGB-1) expression. In vitro experiments with two NB cell lines showed that hypoxia was the common driver of all the above phenomena and that human recombinant HMGB-1 amplified EMT and TDEC trans-differentiation. In conclusion, TDEC targeting with hCD31 mAb increases tumor hypoxia, setting the stage for the occurrence of EMT and of new waves of TDEC trans-differentiation. These adaptive responses to the changes induced by immunotherapy in the tumor microenvironment allow tumor cells to escape from the effects of hCD31 mAb. Impact Journals LLC 2014-05-26 /pmc/articles/PMC4279379/ /pubmed/25362644 Text en Copyright: © 2014 Pezzolo et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Pezzolo, Annalisa
Marimpietri, Danilo
Raffaghello, Lizzia
Cocco, Claudia
Pistorio, Angela
Gambini, Claudio
Cilli, Michele
Horenstein, Alberto
Malavasi, Fabio
Pistoia, Vito
Failure of anti tumor-derived endothelial cell immunotherapy depends on augmentation of tumor hypoxia
title Failure of anti tumor-derived endothelial cell immunotherapy depends on augmentation of tumor hypoxia
title_full Failure of anti tumor-derived endothelial cell immunotherapy depends on augmentation of tumor hypoxia
title_fullStr Failure of anti tumor-derived endothelial cell immunotherapy depends on augmentation of tumor hypoxia
title_full_unstemmed Failure of anti tumor-derived endothelial cell immunotherapy depends on augmentation of tumor hypoxia
title_short Failure of anti tumor-derived endothelial cell immunotherapy depends on augmentation of tumor hypoxia
title_sort failure of anti tumor-derived endothelial cell immunotherapy depends on augmentation of tumor hypoxia
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4279379/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25362644
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