Vascular endothelial growth factor directly stimulates tumour cell proliferation in non-small cell lung cancer

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Abstract

Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) is a key stimulator of physiological and pathological angiogenesis. VEGF signals primarily through VEGF receptor 2 (VEGFR2), a receptor tyrosine kinase whose expression is found predominantly on endothelial cells. The purpose of this study was to determine the role of VEGFR2 expression in NSCLC cells. NSCLC cells and tissue sections were stained for VEGFR2 expression by immunohistochemistry (IHC). Immunoblotting and ELISA were used to determine the activation and inhibition of VEGFR2 and its downstream signalling pathways. Five-day proliferation assays were carried out in the presence or absence of VEGF. IHC analysis of NSCLC demonstrated tumour cell VEGFR2 expression in 20% of samples. Immunoblot analysis showed expression of VEGFR2 protein in 3/8 NSCLC cell lines that correlated with VEGFR2 mRNA expression levels. VEGF-dependent VEGFR2 activation was apparent in NSCLC cells, and was associated with increased tumor cell proliferation. Cediranib treatment or siRNA against VEGFR2 inhibited VEGF-dependent increases in cell proliferation. Inhibition of VEGFR2 tyrosine kinase activity using cediranib was more effective than inhibition of AKT (MK2206) or MEK (AZD6244) for overcoming VEGFR2- driven cell proliferation. VEGF treatment did not affect cell survival following treatment with radiation, cisplatin, docetaxel or gemcitabine. Our data suggest that a subset of NSCLC tumour cells express functional VEGFR2 which can act to promote VEGF-dependent tumour cell growth. In this tumour subset, therapies targeting VEGFR2 signalling, such as cediranib, have the potential to inhibit both tumour cell proliferation and angiogenesis.

Figures

  • Figure 1. VEGFR2 protein is expressed in NSCLC tumours and tumour cell lines. (A) VEGFR2 protein expression in NSCLC by IHC. Examples of positive and negative tumour cell expression are shown. (B) Representative images of 3+ (TT, medullary thyroid cancer, positive control), 2+ (H441), 1+ (H1792) and negative (H1568) VEGFR2 staining in cell line pellets (bar 50 µm). (C) Relationship between VEGFR2 mRNA and protein levels in NSCLC cell lines (n=25) and a positive control cell line (TT). (D) Expression of total VEGFR2 protein by immunoblotting, and VEGFR2 mRNA levels by qpCR in a panel of NSCLC cell lines, including a positive control cell line (TT). (E) VEGF-stimulated activated (phosphorylated) VEGFR2 levels in the panel of NSCLC cell lines.
  • Figure 2. VEGFR2 activation by VEGF results in downstream phosphorylation of p42/44 MApK and increased H441 proliferation. (A) pVEGFR2 levels measured by ELISA in serum-starved H441 cells following VEGF (10 ng/ml) stimulation. (B) Immunoblot of total and phosphorylated AKT and p42/44 MApK following VEGF (10 ng/ml) stimulation of serum-starved H441 cells. (C) ELISA showing pVEGFR2 induction by VEGF and inhibition by cediranib in H441 cells. (D) Five-day proliferation assay for H441 in 0.2% FBS plus VEGF at 5 days in the presence of absence of cediranib or (E) VEGFR2 mRNA knockdown with siRNA. (F) VEGFR2 protein expression in H441 cells following treatment with transfection reagent alone (Dharmafect), control siRNA or VEGFR2 siRNA. Data are from three independent experiments, each in triplicate. *p<0.05.
  • Figure 3. VEGF does not protect H441 cells from irradiation- or chemotherapy-induced apoptosis, or affect H441 migration. Induction of apoptosis in H441 cells following exposure to (A) irradiation or (B) cediranib or chemotherapy drugs relevant to NSCLC for 24 h in the presence or absence of VEGF. (C) VEGF-induced migration of serum-starved H441. Data are from three independent experiments, each in triplicate.
  • Figure 4. Targeting downstream signalling is not as effective as VEGFR2 kinase inhibition for checking VEGF-dependent H441 cell proliferation. (A) Immunoblot and (B) pVEGFR2 ELISA to evaluate the effects of 24 h treatment with a selective MEK inhibitor (AZD6244), AKT inhibitor (MK2206), or VEGFR inhibitor (cediranib). (C) The impact of AKT, MEK or VEGFR inhibition on VEGF stimulated proliferation in serum-starved H441 cells. proliferation data are from three independent experiments, each in quadruplicate.

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Devery, A. M., Wadekar, R., Bokobza, S. M., Weber, A. M., Jiang, Y., & Ryan, A. J. (2015). Vascular endothelial growth factor directly stimulates tumour cell proliferation in non-small cell lung cancer. International Journal of Oncology, 47(3), 849–856. https://doi.org/10.3892/ijo.2015.3082

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