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CXCR4/YY1 inhibition impairs VEGF network and angiogenesis during malignancy

Authors :
Antonio Giordano
Mario Petrillo
Diana C. Márquez-Garbán
Toshio Hayashi
Alfonso Giovane
Valeria Crudele
Louis J. Ignarro
Letizia Cito
Amelia Casamassimi
Hermes Garban
Antonella Petrillo
Linda Sommese
Alfredo Siani
Claudio Arra
Franco Rengo
Antonio Barbieri
Filomena de Nigris
Andrea Fiore
Claudio Napoli
Francesco Cacciatore
Francesca Pentimalli
Mohammed Al-Omran
de Nigris, F
Crudele, V
Giovane, A
Casamassimi, A
Giordano, A
Garban, Hj
Cacciatore, F
Pentimalli, F
Marquez Garban, Dc
Petrillo, A
Cito, L
Sommese, L
Fiore, A
Petrillo, M
Siani, A
Barbieri, A
Arra, C
Rengo, Franco
Hayashi, T
Al Omran, M
Ignarro, Lj
Napoli, C.
de NIGRIS, Filomena
Giovane, Alfonso
Casamassimi, Amelia
MARQUEZ GARBAN, Dc
Sommese, Linda
Rengo, F
AL OMRAN, M
Napoli, Claudio
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

Tumor growth requires neoangiogenesis. VEGF is the most potent proangiogenic factor. Dysregulation of hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF) or cytokine stimuli such as those involving the chemokine receptor 4/stromal-derived cell factor 1 (CXCR4/SDF-1) axis are the major cause of ectopic overexpression of VEGF in tumors. Although the CXCR4/SDF-1 pathway is well characterized, the transcription factors executing the effector function of this signaling are poorly understood. The multifunctional Yin Yang 1 (YY1) protein is highly expressed in different types of cancers and may regulate some cancer-related genes. The network involving CXCR4/YY1 and neoangiogenesis could play a major role in cancer progression. In this study we have shown that YY1 forms an active complex with HIF-1α at VEGF gene promoters and increases VEGF transcription and expression observed by RT-PCR, ELISA, and Western blot using two different antibodies against VEGFB. Long-term treatment with T22 peptide (a CXCR4/SDF-1 inhibitor) and YY1 silencing can reduce in vivo systemic neoangiogenesis ( P < 0.01 and P < 0.05 vs. control, respectively) during metastasis. Moreover, using an in vitro angiogenesis assay, we observed that YY1 silencing led to a 60% reduction in branches ( P < 0.01) and tube length ( P < 0.02) and a 75% reduction in tube area ( P < 0.001) compared with control cells. A similar reduction was observed using T22 peptide. We demonstrated that T22 peptide determines YY1 cytoplasmic accumulation by reducing its phosphorylation via down-regulation of AKT, identifying a crosstalk mechanism involving CXCR4/YY1. Thus, YY1 may represent a crucial molecular target for antiangiogenic therapy during cancer progression.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6268711179a6d5654408ead2e392edbd