PMID: 11912165Mar 26, 2002Paper

VEGF(121), VEGF(165) overexpression enhances tumorigenicity in U251 MG but not in NG-1 glioma cells

Cancer Research
Li Dao KeW K Yung

Abstract

Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) is a multifunctional cytokine with important roles in angiogenesis. VEGF is overexpressed in human cancers, including highly vascularized and infiltrative brain tumors. In our previous study of seven glioma cell lines, VEGF expression levels correlated with blood vessel density and tumorigenicity, and U251 MG and NG-1 cells were recognized as low-tumorigenic glioma cell lines. We hypothesized that low-tumorigenic cells can become highly tumorigenic when high levels of VEGF are expressed. To test this hypothesis, we constructed VEGF expression vectors containing 564 bp or 696 bp of VEGF(121) or VEGF(165) cDNA, respectively, and transfected them into U251 MG and NG-1 cells. In comparison to parental cells, the 20 VEGF-expressing clones examined had on average 8-10-fold more VEGF mRNA and 12-88-fold more secreted VEGF proteins. Four VEGF-overexpressing clones (U251 MG/V121-C2, U251 MG/V165-C3, NG-1/V121-C6, and NG-1/V165-C3) were selected for additional study. As VEGF production increased with population growth, U251 MG/V121-C2 and U251 MG/V165-C3 cells accumulated 47.9 and 22.0 ng of VEGF during a 5-day culture of 10(4) cells, a 313- and 144-fold overexpression when compared with that in ...Continue Reading

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