[HTML][HTML] Blocking neuropilin-2 function inhibits tumor cell metastasis

M Caunt, J Mak, WC Liang, S Stawicki, Q Pan, RK Tong… - Cancer cell, 2008 - cell.com
M Caunt, J Mak, WC Liang, S Stawicki, Q Pan, RK Tong, J Kowalski, C Ho, HB Reslan…
Cancer cell, 2008cell.com
Metastasis, which commonly uses lymphatics, accounts for much of the mortality associated
with cancer. The vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF)-C coreceptor, neuropilin-2
(Nrp2), modulates but is not necessary for developmental lymphangiogenesis, and its
significance for metastasis is unknown. An antibody to Nrp2 that blocks VEGFC binding
disrupts VEGFC-induced lymphatic endothelial cell migration, but not proliferation, in part
independently of VEGF receptor activation. It does not affect established lymphatics in …
Summary
Metastasis, which commonly uses lymphatics, accounts for much of the mortality associated with cancer. The vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF)-C coreceptor, neuropilin-2 (Nrp2), modulates but is not necessary for developmental lymphangiogenesis, and its significance for metastasis is unknown. An antibody to Nrp2 that blocks VEGFC binding disrupts VEGFC-induced lymphatic endothelial cell migration, but not proliferation, in part independently of VEGF receptor activation. It does not affect established lymphatics in normal adult mice but reduces tumoral lymphangiogenesis and, importantly, functional lymphatics associated with tumors. It also reduces metastasis to sentinel lymph nodes and distant organs, apparently by delaying the departure of tumor cells from the primary tumor. Our results demonstrate that Nrp2, which was originally identified as an axon-guidance receptor, is an attractive target for modulating metastasis.
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