Abstract

Abstract In order to identify suitable therapeutic targets for glioma anti-angiogenic therapy, the process of neovascularization mediated by circulating angiogenic cells (CACs) needs to be scrutinized. In the present study we compared the expression of neovascularization-related genes by three circulating CAC subsets (HPCs, CD34+ and KDR+ cells; internal controls: PBMCs and circulating endothelial cells) of treatment-naïve patients with glioblastoma (GBM) to those of patients undergoing reactive neovascularization (myocardial infarction (MI). CACs from umbilical cord (representing developmental neovascularization) and healthy subjects served as controls. Fluorescent activated cell sorting was used to isolate CACs, RT-PCR to determine the expression levels of a panel of 48 neovascularization-related genes, Luminex assays to measure plasma levels of 21 CAC-related circulating molecules. We found essential differences in gene expression between GBM and MI CACs. GBM CACs had a higher expression of pro-angiogenic factors (esp. KITL, CXCL12 and JAG1); growth factor and chemotactic receptors (IGF1R, TGFbR2, CXCR4 and CCR2); adhesion receptor monomers (ITGA5 and ITGA6) and matricellular factor POSTN. In addition, we found major differences in the levels of neovascularization-related plasma factors. A strong positive correlation between plasma MMP9 levels and expression of CXCR4 in the CAC subset of hematopoietic progenitor cells (HPCs) was found in GBM patients. Our findings indicate that CAC-mediated neovascularization in GBM is characterized by more efficient CAC homing to target tissue and a more potent pro-angiogenic response than in physiologic tissue repair in MI. Our findings can aid in selecting targets for therapeutic strategies acting against GBM-specific CACs.

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