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B-Crystallin, an effector of unfolded protein response, confers anti-VEGF resistance to breast cancer via maintenance of intracrine VEGF in endothelial cells [RETRACTED]

Ruan, Q., Han, S., Jiang, Wen Guo ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3283-1111, Boulton, M. E., Chen, Z. J., Law, B. K. and Cai, Jun 2011. B-Crystallin, an effector of unfolded protein response, confers anti-VEGF resistance to breast cancer via maintenance of intracrine VEGF in endothelial cells [RETRACTED]. Molecular Cancer Research 9 (12) , pp. 1632-1643. 10.1158/1541-7786.MCR-11-0327

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Abstract

Effective inhibition of angiogenesis targeting the tumor endothelial cells requires identification of key cellular and molecular mechanisms associated with survival of vasculatures within the tumor microenvironment. Intracellular autocrine (intracrine) VEGF production by endothelial cells plays a critical role on the vasculature homeostasis. In vitro breast cancer cell–stimulated activation of the unfolded protein response (UPR) of the endothelial cells contributes to maintenance of the intracrine VEGF levels in the endothelial cells through the upregulation of a previous undescribed downstream effector- αB-crystallin (CRYAB). siRNA-mediated knockdown of two major UPR proteins—inositol requiring kinase 1 and ATF6, led to attenuated CRYAB expression of the endothelial cells. Finally, inhibition of CRYAB blocked the breast cancer cell–stimulated increase in the endogenous VEGF levels of the endothelial cells. A VEGF limited proteolysis assay further revealed that CRYAB protected VEGF for proteolytic degradation. Here, we report that the molecular chaperone-CRYAB was significantly increased and colocalized with tumor vessels in a breast cancer xenograft. Specifically, neutralization of VEGF induced higher levels of CRYAB expression in the endothelial cells cocultured with MDA-MB-231 or the breast cancer xenograft with a significant survival benefit. However, knockdown of CRYAB had a greater inhibitory effect on endothelial survival. These findings underscore the importance of defining a role for intracrine VEGF signaling in sustaining aberrant tumor angiogenesis and strongly implicate UPR/CRYAB as dichotomous parts of a crucial regulation pathway for maintaining intracrine VEGF signaling.

Item Type: Article
Date Type: Publication
Status: Published
Schools: Medicine
Subjects: R Medicine > R Medicine (General)
R Medicine > RC Internal medicine > RC0254 Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology (including Cancer)
Additional Information: A retraction to this article has been published: Mol Cancer Res (2011) 9 (12): 1632–1643. https://doi.org/10.1158/1541-7786.MCR-22-0454
Publisher: American Association of Cancer Research
ISSN: 1541-7786
Related URLs:
Last Modified: 11 Mar 2024 11:01
URI: https://orca.cardiff.ac.uk/id/eprint/27653

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