ID | 111278 |
著者 |
Tomida, Chisato
Tokushima University
Aibara, Kana
Tokushima University
Yamagishi, Naoko
Tokushima University
Yano, Chiaki
Tokushima University
Nagano, Hikaru
Sagami Women’s University
Ohno, Ayako
Tokushima University
|
キーワード | angiogenesis inhibitor
VEGF receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitor
regorafenib
colon cancer cells
malignant phenotype
|
資料タイプ |
学術雑誌論文
|
抄録 | A number of anti-angiogenic drugs targeting vascular endothelial growth factor receptors (VEGF-R) have developed and enabled significant advances in cancer therapy including colorectal cancer. However, acquired resistance to the drugs occurs, leading to disease progression, such as invasion and metastasis. How tumors become the resistance and promote their malignancy remains fully uncertain. One of possible mechanisms for the resistance and the progression may be the direct effect of VEGF-R inhibitors on tumor cells expressing VEGF-R. We investigated here the direct effect of a VEGF-R-targeting agent, regorafenib, which is the first small molecule inhibitor of VEGF-Rs for the treatment of patients with colorectal cancer, on phenotype changes in colon cancer HCT116 cells. Treatment of cells with regorafenib for only 2 days activated cell migration and invasion, while vehicle-treated control cells showed less activity. Intriguingly, chronic exposure to regorafenib for 90 days dramatically increased migration and invasion activities and induced a resistance to hypoxia-induced apoptosis. These results suggest that loss of VEGF signaling in cancer cells may induce the acquired resistance to VEGF/VEGF-R targeting therapy by gaining two major malignant phenotypes, apoptosis resistance and activation of migration/invasion.
|
掲載誌名 |
The Journal of Medical Investigation
|
ISSN | 13496867
13431420
|
cat書誌ID | AA11166929
AA12022913
|
出版者 | Faculty of Medicine Tokushima University
|
巻 | 62
|
号 | 3-4
|
開始ページ | 195
|
終了ページ | 198
|
並び順 | 195
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発行日 | 2015-08
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EDB ID | |
出版社版DOI | |
出版社版URL | |
フルテキストファイル | |
言語 |
eng
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著者版フラグ |
出版社版
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部局 |
医学系
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