PMID: 11309274Apr 20, 2001Paper

Molecular regulation of tumor cell vasculogenic mimicry by tyrosine phosphorylation: role of epithelial cell kinase (Eck/EphA2)

Cancer Research
A R HessM J Hendrix

Abstract

During embryogenesis, blood vessels are formed initially by the process of vasculogenesis, the in situ differentiation of mesenchymal cells into endothelial cells, which form a primitive, patterned vasculogenic network. This is followed by angiogenesis, the sprouting of new vessels from preexisting vasculature, to yield a more refined microcirculation. However, we and our collaborators have recently described a process termed "vasculogenic mimicry," which consists of the formation of patterned, tubular networks by aggressive melanoma tumor cells (in three-dimensional cultures in vitro), that mimics endothelial-formed vasculogenic networks and correlates with poor clinical prognosis in patients. Previous microarray analysis from our laboratory comparing the highly aggressive versus the poorly aggressive melanoma cells revealed a significant increased expression of tyrosine kinases associated with the aggressive melanoma phenotype. Because of the important role of protein tyrosine kinases in phosphorylating various signal transduction proteins that are critical for many cellular processes (e.g., cell adhesion, migration, and invasion), we examined whether protein tyrosine kinases are involved in melanoma vasculogenic mimicry. Imm...Continue Reading

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