The Heparan Sulfate Binding Peptide in Tumor Progression of Triple-Negative Breast Cancer

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Abstract

Angiogenesis is the formation of new vessels from pre-existing vasculature. The heparan sulfate chains from endothelial cell proteoglycans interact with the major angiogenic factors, regulating blood vessels´ formation. Since the FDA´s first approval, anti-angiogenic therapy has shown tumor progression inhibition and increased patient survival. Previous work in our group has selected an HS-binding peptide using a phage display system. Therefore, we investigated the effect of the selected peptide in angiogenesis and tumor progression. The HS-binding peptide showed a higher affinity for heparin N-sulfated. The HS-binding peptide was able to inhibit the proliferation of human endothelial umbilical cord cells (HUVEC) by modulation of FGF-2. It was verified a significant decrease in the tube formation of human endothelial cells and capillary formation of mice aorta treated with HS-binding peptide. HS-binding peptide also inhibited the formation of sub-intestinal blood vessels in zebrafish embryos. Additionally, in zebrafish embryos, the tumor size decreased after treatment with HS-binding peptide.

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Melo, C. M., Wang, H., Fujimura, K., Strnadel, J., Meneghetti, M. C. Z., Nader, H. B., … Pinhal, M. A. S. (2021). The Heparan Sulfate Binding Peptide in Tumor Progression of Triple-Negative Breast Cancer. Frontiers in Oncology, 11. https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2021.697626

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