Beta IV spectrin inhibits the metastatic growth of melanoma by suppressing VEGFR2‐driven tumor angiogenesis

Author:

Kwak Eun‐A.1ORCID,Ahmed Tasmia2,Flores Paola Cruz2,Ortiz Hannah R.1,Langlais Paul R.3,Mythreye Karthikeyan4,Lee Nam Y.125ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pharmacology University of Arizona Tucson Arizona USA

2. Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry University of Arizona Tucson Arizona USA

3. Department of Medicine University of Arizona Tucson Arizona USA

4. Department of Pathology University of Alabama at Birmingham Birmingham Alabama USA

5. Comprehensive Cancer Center University of Arizona Tucson Arizona USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundTumor‐associated angiogenesis mediates the growth and metastasis of most solid cancers. Targeted therapies of the VEGF pathways can effectively block these processes but often fail to provide lasting benefits due to acquired resistance and complications.ResultsRecently, we discovered βIV‐spectrin as a powerful regulator of angiogenesis and potential new target. We previously reported that βIV‐spectrin is dynamically expressed in endothelial cells (EC) to induce VEGFR2 protein turnover during development. Here, we explored how βIV‐spectrin influences the tumor vasculature using the murine B16 melanoma model and determined that loss of EC‐specific βIV‐spectrin dramatically promotes tumor growth and metastasis. Intraperitoneally injected B16 cells formed larger tumors with increased tumor vessel density and greater propensity for metastatic spread particularly to the chest cavity and lung compared to control mice. These results support βIV‐spectrin as a key regulator of tumor angiogenesis and a viable vascular target in cancer.

Funder

Center for Strategic Scientific Initiatives, National Cancer Institute

National Cancer Institute

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cancer Research,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,Oncology

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