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Thrombospondin 2 expression is correlated with inhibition of angiogenesis and metastasis of colon cancer
Authors
A Oldberg
C Graham
+56 more
C Legrand
CD Laherty
DD Roberts
DL Weinstat-Saalow
DT Connolly
EA Jaffe
EA Jaffe
EH Sage
G Taraboletti
GD Grossfeld
GD Grossfeld
H Hatanaka
H Kijima
H Yamazaki
HL Vos
J Lawler
J Lawler
J Rak
K Maeda
KS O’Shea
KS O’Shea
M Laiho
M Nakamura
ML Iruela-Arispe
N Bertin
N Tamaoki
N Weidner
N Weidner
NL Baenziger
OV Volpert
OV Volpert
P Bornstein
P Bornstein
P Clezardin
P Macchiarini
RA Majack
RP Gehron
S Sadahiro
SC Hsu
SR Warren
T Tokunaga
T Tokunaga
T Tsuchida
TL Labell
TN Wight
TS Panetti
V Stellmach
V Zabrenetzky
X Qian
Y Abe
Y Fukushima
Y Oshika
Y Ozeki
Y Takahashi
Y Takahashi
Y Ueyama
Publication date
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Doi
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on
PubMed
Abstract
Two subtypes of thrombospondin (TSP-1 and TSP-2) have inhibitory roles in angiogenesis in vitro, although the biological significance of these TSP isoforms has not been determined in vivo. We examined TSP-1 and TSP-2 gene expression by reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) analysis in 61 colon cancers. Thirty-eight of these 61 colon cancers were positive for TSP-2 expression and showed hepatic metastasis at a significantly lower incidence than those without TSP-2 expression (P = 0.02). TSP-2 expression was significantly associated with M0 stage in these colon cancers (P = 0.03), whereas TSP-1 expression showed no apparent correlation with these factors. The colon cancer patients with TSP-2 expression showed a significantly low frequency of liver metastasis correlated with the cell-associated isoform of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF-189) (P = 0.0006). Vascularity was estimated by CD34 staining, and TSP-2(–)/VEGF-189(+) colon cancers showed significantly increased vessel counts and density in the stroma (P < 0.0001). TSP-2(–)/VEGF-189(+) colon cancer patients also showed significantly poorer prognosis compared with those with TSP-2(+) / VEGF-189(–) (P = 0.0014). These results suggest that colon cancer metastasis is critically determined by angiogenesis resulting from the balance between the angioinhibitory factor TSP-2 and angiogenic factor VEGF-189. © 1999 Cancer Research Campaig
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Last time updated on 03/12/2019