Zone-specific remodeling of tumor blood vessels affects tumor growth.

Standard

Zone-specific remodeling of tumor blood vessels affects tumor growth. / Tilki, Derya; Kilic, Nerbil; Sevinc, Sema; Zywietz, F.; Stief, Christian G; Ergun, Suleyman.

in: CANCER-AM CANCER SOC, Jahrgang 110, Nr. 10, 10, 2007, S. 2347-2362.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Tilki, D, Kilic, N, Sevinc, S, Zywietz, F, Stief, CG & Ergun, S 2007, 'Zone-specific remodeling of tumor blood vessels affects tumor growth.', CANCER-AM CANCER SOC, Jg. 110, Nr. 10, 10, S. 2347-2362. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17849463?dopt=Citation>

APA

Tilki, D., Kilic, N., Sevinc, S., Zywietz, F., Stief, C. G., & Ergun, S. (2007). Zone-specific remodeling of tumor blood vessels affects tumor growth. CANCER-AM CANCER SOC, 110(10), 2347-2362. [10]. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17849463?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Tilki D, Kilic N, Sevinc S, Zywietz F, Stief CG, Ergun S. Zone-specific remodeling of tumor blood vessels affects tumor growth. CANCER-AM CANCER SOC. 2007;110(10):2347-2362. 10.

Bibtex

@article{79d9c1eb346449719d1f6f76a3386780,
title = "Zone-specific remodeling of tumor blood vessels affects tumor growth.",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Chaotic organization, abnormal leakiness, and structural instability are characteristics of tumor vessels. However, morphologic events of vascular remodeling in relation to tumor growth are not sufficiently studied yet. METHODS: By using the rat rhabdomyosarcoma tumor model vascular morphogenesis was studied by light and electron microscopy and immunohistochemistry in relation to tumor regions such as tumor surrounding (TSZ), marginal (TMZ), intermediate (TIZ), and center (TCZ) zones. RESULTS: The analyses revealed that blood vessels of TSZ display a regular ultrastructure, whereas blood vessels of TMZ showed a chaotic organization and unstable structure with a diffuse or even lacking basal lamina, and missing or irregular assembled periendothelial cells. In contrast, blood vessels of TIZ and TCZ exhibited a more or less stabilized vessel structure with increased diameter. Correspondingly, normal assembly of alpha-smooth-muscle-actin (alpha-SMA)-positive cells into the vessel wall was observed in blood vessels of TSZ, TIZ, and TCZ. Also, Ang1 immunostaining was strongest in large vessels of TIZ and TCZ, whereas Ang2 staining was prominent in small vessels of TIZ. Tie2 staining was detectable in small and large vessels of all tumor zones. Immunostaining for alpha(v)beta(3)-integrin was strongest in small vessels of TMZ, whereas large vessels of TIZ and TCZ were almost negative. CONCLUSIONS: The results indicate a zone-specific remodeling of tumor blood vessels by stabilization of vessels in TIZ and TCZ, whereas small vessels of these zones obviously undergo regression leading to tumor necrosis. Thus, a better understanding of vascular remodeling and stabilization in tumors would enable new strategies in tumor therapy and imaging.",
author = "Derya Tilki and Nerbil Kilic and Sema Sevinc and F. Zywietz and Stief, {Christian G} and Suleyman Ergun",
year = "2007",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "110",
pages = "2347--2362",
journal = "CANCER-AM CANCER SOC",
issn = "0008-543X",
publisher = "John Wiley and Sons Inc.",
number = "10",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Zone-specific remodeling of tumor blood vessels affects tumor growth.

AU - Tilki, Derya

AU - Kilic, Nerbil

AU - Sevinc, Sema

AU - Zywietz, F.

AU - Stief, Christian G

AU - Ergun, Suleyman

PY - 2007

Y1 - 2007

N2 - BACKGROUND: Chaotic organization, abnormal leakiness, and structural instability are characteristics of tumor vessels. However, morphologic events of vascular remodeling in relation to tumor growth are not sufficiently studied yet. METHODS: By using the rat rhabdomyosarcoma tumor model vascular morphogenesis was studied by light and electron microscopy and immunohistochemistry in relation to tumor regions such as tumor surrounding (TSZ), marginal (TMZ), intermediate (TIZ), and center (TCZ) zones. RESULTS: The analyses revealed that blood vessels of TSZ display a regular ultrastructure, whereas blood vessels of TMZ showed a chaotic organization and unstable structure with a diffuse or even lacking basal lamina, and missing or irregular assembled periendothelial cells. In contrast, blood vessels of TIZ and TCZ exhibited a more or less stabilized vessel structure with increased diameter. Correspondingly, normal assembly of alpha-smooth-muscle-actin (alpha-SMA)-positive cells into the vessel wall was observed in blood vessels of TSZ, TIZ, and TCZ. Also, Ang1 immunostaining was strongest in large vessels of TIZ and TCZ, whereas Ang2 staining was prominent in small vessels of TIZ. Tie2 staining was detectable in small and large vessels of all tumor zones. Immunostaining for alpha(v)beta(3)-integrin was strongest in small vessels of TMZ, whereas large vessels of TIZ and TCZ were almost negative. CONCLUSIONS: The results indicate a zone-specific remodeling of tumor blood vessels by stabilization of vessels in TIZ and TCZ, whereas small vessels of these zones obviously undergo regression leading to tumor necrosis. Thus, a better understanding of vascular remodeling and stabilization in tumors would enable new strategies in tumor therapy and imaging.

AB - BACKGROUND: Chaotic organization, abnormal leakiness, and structural instability are characteristics of tumor vessels. However, morphologic events of vascular remodeling in relation to tumor growth are not sufficiently studied yet. METHODS: By using the rat rhabdomyosarcoma tumor model vascular morphogenesis was studied by light and electron microscopy and immunohistochemistry in relation to tumor regions such as tumor surrounding (TSZ), marginal (TMZ), intermediate (TIZ), and center (TCZ) zones. RESULTS: The analyses revealed that blood vessels of TSZ display a regular ultrastructure, whereas blood vessels of TMZ showed a chaotic organization and unstable structure with a diffuse or even lacking basal lamina, and missing or irregular assembled periendothelial cells. In contrast, blood vessels of TIZ and TCZ exhibited a more or less stabilized vessel structure with increased diameter. Correspondingly, normal assembly of alpha-smooth-muscle-actin (alpha-SMA)-positive cells into the vessel wall was observed in blood vessels of TSZ, TIZ, and TCZ. Also, Ang1 immunostaining was strongest in large vessels of TIZ and TCZ, whereas Ang2 staining was prominent in small vessels of TIZ. Tie2 staining was detectable in small and large vessels of all tumor zones. Immunostaining for alpha(v)beta(3)-integrin was strongest in small vessels of TMZ, whereas large vessels of TIZ and TCZ were almost negative. CONCLUSIONS: The results indicate a zone-specific remodeling of tumor blood vessels by stabilization of vessels in TIZ and TCZ, whereas small vessels of these zones obviously undergo regression leading to tumor necrosis. Thus, a better understanding of vascular remodeling and stabilization in tumors would enable new strategies in tumor therapy and imaging.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 110

SP - 2347

EP - 2362

JO - CANCER-AM CANCER SOC

JF - CANCER-AM CANCER SOC

SN - 0008-543X

IS - 10

M1 - 10

ER -