UNC scientists identify growth factor as possible cancer drug target
Chapel Hill, NC -
To grow and spread, tumors need new blood vessels, a process called angiogenesis.
One growth factor that causes angiogenesis has been identified - vascular endothelial
growth factor or VEGF - and drugs to inhibit VEGF are already in use.
But not all tumors respond to the therapy initially or over the long term.
Thus new growth factors need to be identified to aid in developing the next
generation of angiogenesis inhibitors.
Scientists
at the UNC Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center report finding a new angiogenesis
protein, SFRP2, found in the blood vessels of numerous tumor sites, including
breast prostate, lung, pancreas, ovarian, colon, kidney tumors, and angiosarcomas.
The scientists found that SFRP2 is a potent stimulator of angiogenesis. This
protein may be a favorable target for inhibiting angiogenesis which would then “starve” the
tumor of its blood supply, thus destroying the cancer.
“The discovery that SFRP2 stimulates angiogenesis and is present in
blood vessels of a wide variety of tumors provides us with a new target for
drug design,” said Nancy Klauber-DeMore, MD, senior author. The study
was published online in the journal Cancer Research. Klauber-DeMore
is associate professor of surgery and a member of UNC Lineberger Comprehensive
Cancer Center.
Based on the UNC-led team’s understanding of how this protein works
in the blood vessels, scientists successfully utilized a drug, tacrolimus,
which is commonly used to prevent organ transplant rejection, to inhibit the
growth of angiosarcoma in pre-clinical studies. Angiosarcoma is a highly aggressive
cancer that begins in the cells lining the blood or lymph vessels for which
options for therapy are limited.
Klauber-DeMore, as part of her medical training, completed a surgical research
fellowship in the laboratory of Dr. Judah Folkman at Children’s Hospital
in Boston. Folkman founded the field of angiogenesis research. Kaluber-DeMore
worked with colleagues at the UNC Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center, the
Carolina Cardiovascular Biology Center, and the Department of Dermatology at
Emory University School of Medicine and the Atlanta VA Medical Center.