Suppression of growth and cancer-induced angiogenesis of aggressive human breast cancer cells (MDA-MB-231) on the chorioallantoic membrane of developing chicken embryos by E-peptide of pro-IGF-I.

Publication/Presentation Date

8-1-2007

Abstract

E-peptide of the pro-Insulin-like growth factor-I (pro-IGF-I) is produced from pre-pro-IGF-I by proteolytic cleavage in the post-translational processing. Previous in vitro studies conducted in our laboratory showed that Ea4-peptide of rainbow trout (rt) pro-IGF-I or Eb-peptide of human (h) pro-IGF-I exhibited activities including induction of morphological differentiation, inhibition of anchorage-independent cell growth and suppression of invasion of several well established human cancer cell lines such as MDA-MB-231, HT-29, SK-N-F1, and HepG-2 (Chen et al. [2002] Gen Comp Endocrinol 126:342-351; Kuo and Chen [2002] Exp Cell Res 280:75-89). Seeding of aggressive human breast cancer cells, MDA-MB-231, on the chorioallantoic membrane (CAM) of 5 days old chicken embryos resulted in rapid growth and invasion of the cells and induction of blood vessel formation around the MDA-MB-231 cell mass in the chicken embryos. The invasion of MDA-MB-231 cells in the chicken embryos was further confirmed by immunocytochemistry. The rapid growth and invasion of MDA-MB-231 cells and the induction of blood vessel formation by MDA-MB-231 cells on chicken CAM are inhibited by treatment with a single or multiple doses of rtEa4- or hEb-peptide. Furthermore, a dose-dependent inhibition of angiogenesis by rtEa4- or hEb-peptide was also demonstrated by the chicken CAM assay. Results of microarray analysis of human gene chips (containing 9,500 unique cDNA clones) and confirmation by comparative real-time RT-PCR analysis showed that a group of genes related to cancer cell activities are up- or down-regulated in MDA-MB-231 cells transfected with a rtEa4-peptide gene. Together these results confirm the anti-tumor activity of rtEa4- and hEb-peptides, and further suggest that these peptides could be developed as therapeutics for treating human cancers.

Volume

101

Issue

5

First Page

1316

Last Page

1327

ISSN

0730-2312

Disciplines

Medicine and Health Sciences | Pediatrics

PubMedID

17286280

Department(s)

Department of Pediatrics

Document Type

Article

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