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Vascular endothelial growth factor A

About: Vascular endothelial growth factor A is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 15203 publications have been published within this topic receiving 1271498 citations. The topic is also known as: vascular endothelial growth factor A & vascular endothelial growth factor A165.


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TL;DR: The evidence from these experiments indicates that hypoxic response via Hif-1α is an important positive factor in solid tumor growth and that HIF-1 α affects tumor expansion in ways unrelated to its regulation of VEGF expression.
Abstract: Deficiencies in oxygenation are widespread in solid tumors. The transcription factor hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF)-1alpha is an important mediator of the hypoxic response of tumor cells and controls the up-regulation of a number of factors important for solid tumor expansion, including the angiogenic factor vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF). We have isolated two cell lines nullizygous for HIF-1alpha, one from embryos genetically null for HIF-1alpha, and the other from embryos carrying loxP-flanked alleles of the gene, which allows for cre-mediated excision. The loss of HIF-1alpha negatively affects tumor growth in these two sets of H-ras-transformed cell lines, and this negative effect is not due to deficient vascularization. Despite differences in VEGF expression, vascular density is similar in wild-type and HIF-1alpha-null tumors. The evidence from these experiments indicates that hypoxic response via HIF-1alpha is an important positive factor in solid tumor growth and that HIF-1alpha affects tumor expansion in ways unrelated to its regulation of VEGF expression.

751 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Topical VEGF is able to improve wound healing by locally up-regulating growth factors important for tissue repair and by systemically mobilizing bone marrow-derived cells, including a population that contributes to blood vessel formation, and recruiting these cells to the local wound environment where they are able to accelerate repair.
Abstract: Diminished production of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and decreased angiogenesis are thought to contribute to impaired tissue repair in diabetic patients. We examined whether recombinant human VEGF165 protein would reverse the impaired wound healing phenotype in genetically diabetic mice. Paired full-thickness skin wounds on the dorsum of db/db mice received 20 μg of VEGF every other day for five doses to one wound and vehicle (phosphate-buffered saline) to the other. We demonstrate significantly accelerated repair in VEGF-treated wounds with an average time to resurfacing of 12 days versus 25 days in untreated mice. VEGF-treated wounds were characterized by an early leaky, malformed vasculature followed by abundant granulation tissue deposition. The VEGF-treated wounds demonstrated increased epithelialization, increased matrix deposition, and enhanced cellular proliferation, as assessed by uptake of 5-bromodeoxyuridine. Analysis of gene expression by real-time reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction demonstrates a significant up-regulation of platelet-derived growth factor-B and fibroblast growth factor-2 in VEGF-treated wounds, which corresponds with the increased granulation tissue in these wounds. These experiments also demonstrated an increase in the rate of repair of the contralateral phosphate-buffered saline-treated wound when compared to wounds in diabetic mice never exposed to VEGF (18 days versus 25 days), suggesting that topical VEGF had a systemic effect. We observed increased numbers of circulating VEGFR2+/CD11b− cells in the VEGF-treated mice by fluorescence-activated cell sorting analysis, which likely represent an endothelial precursor population. In diabetic mice with bone marrow replaced by that of tie2/lacZ mice we demonstrate that the local recruitment of bone marrow-derived endothelial lineage lacZ+ cells was augmented by topical VEGF. We conclude that topical VEGF is able to improve wound healing by locally up-regulating growth factors important for tissue repair and by systemically mobilizing bone marrow-derived cells, including a population that contributes to blood vessel formation, and recruiting these cells to the local wound environment where they are able to accelerate repair. Thus, VEGF therapy may be useful in the treatment of diabetic complications characterized by impaired neovascularization.

749 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Findings strongly suggest that autophosphorylation of Y1175 on KDR is crucial for endothelial cell proliferation, and that this region is a new target for anti‐angiogenic reagents.
Abstract: KDR/Flk‐1 tyrosine kinase, one of the two vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) receptors, induces mitogenesis and differentiation of vascular endothelial cells. To understand the mechanisms underlying the VEGF‐A‐induced growth signaling pathway, we constructed a series of human KDR mutants and examined their biological properties. An in vitro kinase assay and subsequent tryptic peptide mapping revealed that Y1175 and Y1214 are the two major VEGF‐A‐dependent autophosphorylation sites. Using an antibody highly specific to the phosphoY1175 region, we demonstrated that Y1175 is phosphorylated rapidly in vivo in primary endothelial cells. When the mutated KDRs were introduced into the endothelial cell lines by adenoviral vectors, only the Y1175F KDR, Tyr1175 to phenylalanine mutant, lost the ability to tyrosine phosphorylate phospholipase C‐γ and, significantly, reduced MAP kinase phosphorylation and DNA synthesis in response to VEGF‐A. Furthermore, primary endothelial cells microinjected with anti‐phosphoY1175 antibody clearly decreased DNA synthesis compared with control cells. These findings strongly suggest that autophosphorylation of Y1175 on KDR is crucial for endothelial cell proliferation, and that this region is a new target for anti‐angiogenic reagents.

749 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: VEGF is a commonly expressed angiogenic factor in human colorectal cancer metastases, VEGF receptors are up-regulated as a concomitant of hepatic tumorigenesis, and modulation of V EGF gene expression or activity may represent a potentially effective antineoplastic therapy in coloreCTal cancer.
Abstract: To investigate the relationship between angiogenesis and hepatic tumorigenesis, we examined the expression of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) in 8 human colon carcinoma cell lines and in 30 human colorectal cancer liver metastases. Abundant message for VEGF was found in all tumors, localized to the malignant cells within each neoplasm. Two receptors for VEGF, KDR and flt1, were also demonstrated in most of the tumors examined. KDR and flt1 mRNA were limited to tumor endothelial cells and were more strongly expressed in the hepatic metastases than in the sinusoidal endothelium of the surrounding liver parenchyma. VEGF monoclonal antibody administration in tumor-bearing athymic mice led to a dose- and time-dependent inhibition of growth of subcutaneous xenografts and to a marked reduction in the number and size of experimental liver metastases. In hepatic metastases of VEGF antibody-treated mice, neither blood vessels nor expression of the mouse KDR homologue flk-1 could be demonstrated. These data indicate that VEGF is a commonly expressed angiogenic factor in human colorectal cancer metastases, that VEGF receptors are up-regulated as a concomitant of hepatic tumorigenesis, and that modulation of VEGF gene expression or activity may represent a potentially effective antineoplastic therapy in colorectal cancer.

746 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This work shows the first evidence that the developmental growth plate in mammals is hypoxic, and that this hypoxia occurs in its interior rather than at its periphery, and finds that VEGF expression in the growth plate is regulated through both HIF-1alpha-dependent and -independent mechanisms.
Abstract: Breakdown or absence of vascular oxygen delivery is a hallmark of many common human diseases, including cancer, myocardial infarction, and stroke. The chief mediator of hypoxic response in mammalian tissues is the transcription factor hypoxia-inducible factor 1 (HIF-1), and its oxygen-sensitive component HIF-1alpha. A key question surrounding HIF-1alpha and the hypoxic response is the role of this transcription factor in cells removed from a functional vascular bed; in this regard there is evidence indicating that it can act as either a survival factor or induce growth arrest and apoptosis. To study more closely how HIF-1alpha functions in hypoxia in vivo, we used tissue-specific targeting to delete HIF-1alpha in an avascular tissue: the cartilaginous growth plate of developing bone. We show here the first evidence that the developmental growth plate in mammals is hypoxic, and that this hypoxia occurs in its interior rather than at its periphery. As a result of this developmental hypoxia, cells that lack HIF-1alpha in the interior of the growth plate die. This is coupled to decreased expression of the CDK inhibitor p57, and increased levels of BrdU incorporation in HIF-1alpha null growth plates, indicating defects in HIF-1alpha-regulated growth arrest occurs in these animals. Furthermore, we find that VEGF expression in the growth plate is regulated through both HIF-1alpha-dependent and -independent mechanisms. In particular, we provide evidence that VEGF expression is up-regulated in a HIF-1alpha-independent manner in chondrocytes surrounding areas of cell death, and this in turn induces ectopic angiogenesis. Altogether, our findings have important implications for the role of hypoxic response and HIF-1alpha in development, and in cell survival in tissues challenged by interruption of vascular flow; they also illustrate the complexities of HIF-1alpha response in vivo, and they provide new insights into mechanisms of growth plate development.

746 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202394
2022189
2021293
2020347
2019306
2018333