Vascular Stroma Formation in Carcinoma in Situ, Invasive Carcinoma, and Metastatic Carcinoma of the Breast
The generation of vascular stroma is essential for solid tumor growth and involves stimulatory and inhibiting factors as well as stromal components that regulate functions such as cellular adhesion, migration, and gene expression. In an effort to obtain a more integrated understanding of vascular st...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Clinical cancer research 1999-05, Vol.5 (5), p.1041-1056 |
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Zusammenfassung: | The generation of vascular stroma is essential for solid tumor growth and involves stimulatory and inhibiting factors as well
as stromal components that regulate functions such as cellular adhesion, migration, and gene expression. In an effort to obtain
a more integrated understanding of vascular stroma formation in breast carcinoma, we examined expression of the angiogenic
factor vascular permeability factor (VPF)/vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF); the VPF/VEGF receptors flt-1 and KDR;
thrombospondin-1, which has been reported to inhibit angiogenesis; and the stromal components collagen type I, total fibronectin,
ED-A+ fibronectin, versican, and decorin by mRNA in situ hybridization on frozen sections of 113 blocks of breast tissue from 68 patients including 28 sections of breast tissue without
malignancy, 18 with in situ carcinomas, 56 with invasive carcinomas, and 8 with metastatic carcinomas. A characteristic expression profile emerged that
was remarkably similar in invasive carcinoma, carcinoma in situ , and metastatic carcinoma, with the following characteristics: strong tumor cell expression of VPF/VEGF; strong endothelial
cell expression of VPF/VEGF receptors; strong expression of thrombospondin-1 by stromal cells and occasionally by tumor cells;
and strong stromal cell expression of collagen type I, total fibronectin, ED-A+ fibronectin, versican, and decorin. The formation
of vascular stroma preceded invasion, raising the possibility that tumor cells invade not into normal breast stroma but rather
into a richly vascular stroma that they have induced. Similarly, tumor cells at sites of metastasis appear to induce the vascular
stroma in which they grow. We conclude that a distinct pattern of mRNA expression characterizes the generation of vascular
stroma in breast cancer and that the formation of vascular stroma may play a role not only in growth of the primary tumor
but also in invasion and metastasis. |
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ISSN: | 1078-0432 1557-3265 |