PMID: 9635593Jul 4, 1998Paper

Significant expression of vascular endothelial growth factor/vascular permeability factor in mouse ascites tumors

Cancer Research
J C LuoM Shibuya

Abstract

Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), also known as vascular permeability factor, is believed to be a potent mediator of peritoneal fluid accumulation and angiogenesis and of tumor growth in ascites tumor. Such roles, however, have not been generally established because of insufficient quantitative and systemic analyses. To address this, we examined the expression of VEGF in 13 mouse ascites tumors (5 sarcomas, 3 carcinomas, 2 lymphomas, 1 leukemia, 1 mastocytoma, and 1 plasmacytoma). Using a newly developed sensitive and specific radioreceptor binding assay and functional assays, we found that active VEGF was significantly accumulated (6-850 ng/ml) in the ascites fluids of all 13 tumors. VEGF concentrations are higher in the tumors of sarcoma and carcinoma origin (430.4 +/- 234.2 ng/ml) than in those of lymphoma and hematological tumor origin (19.2 +/- 10.45 ng/ml). VEGF that accumulated in the peritoneal fluids or expressed in the ascites tumor cells was easily visualized with immunoprecipitation Western blot analysis with a rough correlation to the expression levels of VEGF gene in these tumor cells, suggesting that the tumor cells, at least in part, contributed to the production of the VEGF that accumulated in the asci...Continue Reading

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