Publications by authors named "Jessica C A Bouma-ter Steege"

Purpose: We hypothesized that downstream effects of endogenous vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF)/VEGF receptor signaling on acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) cell survival resulted in increased in vitro cellular drug resistance and a longer time to kill most leukemic cells in vivo upon drug exposure.

Experimental Design: In primary AML cells from pediatric patients, VEGFA and VEGFC mRNA expression and in vitro cellular resistance to nine cytotoxic drugs were studied. As in vivo equivalents for in vitro drug resistance, in vivo AML blast reduction upon drug exposure, measured as blast cell reduction on day 15 in the bone marrow and as time in days from diagnosis to complete remission (CR) were used.

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Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a disease with a poor prognosis. It has been demonstrated that AML cells express the vascular endothelial growth factors, VEGFA and VEGFC, as well as kinase insert domain-containing receptor (VEGFR2), the main receptor for downstream effects, resulting in an autocrine pathway for cell survival. This study investigates the role of the VEGFR inhibitor PTK787/ZK 222584 in leukemic cell death, and the possibility of an additional effect on cell death by a chemotherapeutic drug, amsacrine.

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Tumor escape from immunity, as well as the failure of several anti-cancer vaccination and cellular immunotherapy approaches, is suggested to be due to the angiogenesis-mediated suppression of endothelial cell (EC) adhesion molecules involved in leukocyte-vessel wall interactions. We hypothesized that inhibition of angiogenesis would overcome this escape from immunity. We investigated this in vivo by means of intravital microscopy and ex vivo by immunohistochemistry in two mouse tumor models.

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Article Synopsis
  • * Medullary carcinoma showed a 3.2-fold higher number of infiltrating leukocytes compared to ductal carcinoma, likely due to a significant increase in endothelial ICAM-1 expression in the medullary type.
  • * While ductal carcinomas expressed higher levels of VEGF-C and VEGF-D, the presence of these factors in vitro was found to decrease endothelial ICAM-1 expression, suggesting that angiogenic stimuli could hinder effective leukocyte infiltration in tumors.
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It is known that angiogenesis is of pivotal importance for the development of endometriosis. However, in the treatment of endometriosis patients, prevention of endometriosis lesion development only will not be sufficient as a therapy. Treatment options, aimed at interfering with established lesions, have to be developed.

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The expression of endothelial cell (EC) adhesion molecules involved in leukocyte-vessel wall interactions is suppressed in malignancies. In the present study, we investigated in vivo the regulation of leukocyte-vessel wall interactions by the presence of a tumor. By means of intravital microscopy, tumor necrosis factor alpha-stimulated leukocyte-vessel wall interactions were studied in ear skin microvessels of nude mice bearing small human LS174T colon carcinomas and in C57Bl/6 mice bearing murine B16F10 melanomas.

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The current research aimed to define hypothesis-based anti-angiogenic properties of the vascular targeting agent combretastatin A-4 phosphate (combreAp). The in vitro wound assay indicated that combreAp potently inhibited migration of endothelial cells (EC). A significant inhibition of migration could already be measured after 2 hr of treatment.

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The de novo designed angiogenesis inhibitor anginex was tested in vitro and in vivo for its mechanism of action and antitumor activity. The data presented here demonstrate that anginex is a powerful antiangiogenic agent with significant antitumor activity. The mechanism of action of anginex was found to be the induction of anoikis leading to apoptosis in angiogenically activated endothelial cells, resulting in an up to 90% inhibition of migration in the wound assay.

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