Vascular Disease and Cancer Flashcards

1
Q

Blood vessel components

A

endothelium

extracellular matrix layer

smooth muscle

nervous system connections

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2
Q

The vascular network

A

Made of veins, arteries and capillaries:

  • Artery = high pressure (80-120mm Hg)
  • Veins = low pressure (20-30mm Hg)
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3
Q

Blood vessel wall structure

A

Lumen –> endothelium –> elastica interna –> smooth muscle cells –> Adventitia

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4
Q

Vasculogenesis

A

Devloping new blood vessel networks:

1) Vascular stem cells (hemangioblasts) congregate
2) Develop networks that lay the foundations of new blood vessels
3) Outward sprouting = angiogenesis
4) Inward sprouting = intussusception
5) bridging within vessels

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5
Q

Angiogenesis

A

Sprouting new blood vessels from pre-existing ones using the VEGF-A growth factor

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6
Q

Role of endothelial cells in Angiogenesis

A

Angiogenesis is driven by endothelial-based proliferation, migration & movement (supported by other cell types like pericytes or smooth muscle)

  • Directed angiogenesis by ‘Tip cells’ using projections to detect medium and lead new vessel growth
  • Cells encounter different protein signalling molecules triggering vascular tube growth
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7
Q

Endothelial cell features

A

Unique cells displaying cell surface receptors to engage with growth factors

  • cell adhesion
  • respond to growth factors via cell surface receptors
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8
Q

Key functions of endothelial adhesion

A
  • provides intercellular barrier
  • regulates movement of molecules and cells
  • barrier function helps regulate angiogenesis and vasculogenesis
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9
Q

Cancer’s interaction with vascular network

A

Cancers grow until it subverts nearby blood vessels

  • allows for metastasis and forming secondary tumours
  • increases nutrient supply to facilitate cancer growth
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10
Q

Cancer Immune Surveillance Evasion

A

New turmour cells form after ‘transformation’ events, when an impaired immune system allows the escape of cancer cells

  • leads to cancer growth
  • Increases secretion of pro-angiogenic growth factors (critical switch during hypoxia)
  • angiogenesis and neovascularisation leads to metastasis
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11
Q

Hypoxia stimulating angiogenesis

A

Low O2 levels (hypoxia) = <5% O2 compared to tissues

1) Hypoxia Inducible Factor 1a is stabilised by hypoxia so it doesn’t get ubiquitinated and degraded
2) HIF1a gets translocated into the nucleus and binds with cofactors HIF1b and Cbp/p300
3) HIF1a complex acts as a transcription factor binding to hypoxia response elements (HRE) to promote VEGFA production/secretion

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12
Q

How VEGFA drives angiogenesis

A

VEGFA binds to VEGFR2 receptors on endothelial cell surface to trigger downstream signalling cascade that promote angiogenesis

  • Target for treating epithelial cancer (Avastin, VEGF trap eye, Sutent)
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13
Q

Endothelial VEGF-binding membrane proteins

A

Receptor TKs:
- VEGFR1,2&3 (binding triggers kinase activation)

Non-RTK accessory receptors:
- Neuropilin-1&2 (may bind RTKs as secondary event)

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14
Q

Different outcomes of VEGF system depending on epithelial cell’s condition

A

If cells are engaged (high cell-cell contact)
- promotes cell survival

If cells are spaced (low cell-cell contact)
- promotes growth

Other receptor activation alter angiogenic signalling
- e.g. notch receptor activation = negative regulatory signal (anti-VEGF treatment)

The ‘Angiogenic Switch’ alters cellular metabolism
- promotes oxidative metabolism in oxygen-rich revascularised tissue

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15
Q

The Warburg Effect

A

Normal cells use oxidative phosphorylation to produce ATP from glucose metabolism

In cancer cells, aerobic glycolysis is used instead

  • Less efficient
  • Produces ATP quickly with less metabolic control needed
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16
Q

Targeting the Warburg Effect (anti-Cancer therapies)

A

Metformin = an AMPK Activator

- reduces glucose availability to limit the rate of aerobic glycolysis

17
Q

Cancer therapies: targeting VEGF

A
  • monoclonal antibodies

- Thalidomide

18
Q

Cancer therapies: targeting Kinases

A
  • multikinase inhibitors

- TK inhibitor

19
Q

Cancer therapies: targeting angiogenesis

A
  • Vascular disruption agents (e.g. Combretastatin)