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Incomplete and transitory decrease of glycolysis: a new paradigm for anti-angiogenic therapy?

Authors :
Maria Georgiadou
Annelies Quaegebeur
Mieke Dewerchin
Xingwu Wang
Sandra Cauwenberghs
Sandra Schoors
Peter C. Stapor
Katrien De Bock
Luc Schoonjans
Brian W. Wong
Peter Carmeliet
Francesco Bifari
Anna Rita Cantelmo
Ilaria Decimo
Source :
Cell cycle (Georgetown, Tex.). 13(1)
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

During vessel sprouting, a migratory endothelial tip cell guides the sprout, while proliferating stalk cells elongate the branch. Tip and stalk cell phenotypes are not genetically predetermined fates, but are dynamically interchangeable to ensure that the fittest endothelial cell (EC) leads the vessel sprout. ECs increase glycolysis when forming new blood vessels. Genetic deficiency of the glycolytic activator PFKFB3 in ECs reduces vascular sprouting by impairing migration of tip cells and proliferation of stalk cells. PFKFB3-driven glycolysis promotes the tip cell phenotype during vessel sprouting, since PFKFB3 overexpression overrules the pro-stalk activity of Notch signaling. Furthermore, PFKFB3-deficient ECs cannot compete with wild-type neighbors to form new blood vessels in chimeric mosaic mice. In addition, pharmacological PFKFB3 blockade reduces pathological angiogenesis with modest systemic effects, likely because it decreases glycolysis only partially and transiently. ispartof: Cell Cycle vol:13 issue:1 pages:16-22 ispartof: location:United States status: published

Details

ISSN :
15514005
Volume :
13
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cell cycle (Georgetown, Tex.)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f0bddd5efc3b00b7fa3a423719c6f94e