Abstract

The anti-angiogenic properties of thalidomide have led to the use of the agent as a remedy for multiple myeloma. Nevertheless, the anti-angiogenic moiety of thalidomide remains unidentified. In this study we examined the anti-angiogenic effects of thalidomide in an in vitro model using a three-dimensional collagen gel culture. Angiogenesis was significantly inhibited when the culture was treated with thalidomide plus cytochrome P-450 (CYP2B4), and the migrating cells and tubules were positive for active-caspase-3 in an accompanying immunohistochemical investigation. Transmission electron microscopic observation also confirmed that active-caspase-3-positive cells demonstrated apoptotic characteristics. This study is the first to morphologically demonstrate the effect of thalidomide in directly inducing the apoptosis of new tubules and migrating cells on a three-dimensional collagen gel culture of aorta. Taken together with earlier findings, our new results indicate that the thalidomide-induced inhibition of angiogenesis involves apoptosis in addition to the suppression of TNF-alpha and inhibition of cell migration from aorta explants, i.e., the factors important for capillarogenesis.

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