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2.
J Lab Clin Med ; 147(1): 27-35, 2006 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16443002

ABSTRACT

The VX2 tumor is derived from a papilloma virus-induced rabbit epithelial cell line. If VX2 tumor cells (trapped in a plasma clot) are introduced intravenously into NZW rabbits, the cells lodge in the lung capillary bed and produce tumors. Independently of the tumor burden (ie, the total tumor weight per rabbit), approximately 15% of rabbits with VX2 lung tumors accumulate an effusion in the interpleural space and this pleural effusion contains products of hemostasis. We hypothesized that these products were of intra-tumoral origin and that they changed in concentration as tumor burden increased. Interrelationships among lung-, tumor-weights, and pleural effusion volumes, and the concentrations of fibrinolytic factors, their catabolic products, and other proteins of pleural effusions were measured in rabbits with a wide range of tumor burdens. Positive correlations between tumor burden and total lung weight and between pleural effusion volume and net lung weight suggested that interstitial fluid from the stroma of tumors passed directly into the extravascular space of the lung(s) and into the interpleural space(s). Analyses of pleural effusions indicated that plasminogen-, alpha(2)-antiplasmin-, and plasminogen activator inhibitor-1-related proteins, urokinase-like- and tissue-plasminogen activator activities, and vascular endothelial growth factor increased in concentration up to a tumor burden of approximately 20-25 g. Plasmin activity and intact fibrinogen were absent. The concentration of fibrin(ogen) degradation products did not change significantly up to a tumor burden of approximately 25 g but increased substantially as tumor burdens exceeded 25 g. In conclusion, interstitial fluid from tumors enters the extravascular space of the host and may accumulate with fluid from non-tumor sources as a pleural effusion. The concentrations of fibrinolytic factors and their products in pleural effusions reflect the tumor burden of the rabbit. Conceivably, the components of a malignant effusion contain much information about the extent of tumor growth.


Subject(s)
Fibrin Fibrinogen Degradation Products/metabolism , Fibrinolytic Agents/metabolism , Lung Neoplasms/pathology , Pleural Effusion/pathology , Tumor Virus Infections/pathology , Animals , Disease Models, Animal , Lung/metabolism , Lung/pathology , Lung Neoplasms/metabolism , Male , Organ Size , Plasminogen/metabolism , Plasminogen Activator Inhibitor 1/metabolism , Plasminogen Activators/metabolism , Pleural Effusion/metabolism , Rabbits , Tumor Virus Infections/metabolism , alpha-2-Antiplasmin/metabolism
3.
J Lab Clin Med ; 143(4): 241-54, 2004 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15085083

ABSTRACT

Many types of solid tumors are known to be procoagulant environments. This is partly because a hyperpermeable vascular system within the tumor allows plasma hemostatic factors to accumulate in relatively high concentrations in the stroma, and many solid-tumor cells express tissue factor or a procoagulant factor. These circumstances appear to exist in the VX-2 lung tumor of the New Zealand White (NZW) rabbit, and they sustain a measurable turnover of stromal deposits of fibrin(ogen). We have measured the turnover of fibrinogen within tumors of the VX-2 tumor-burdened rabbit and analysed the catabolic products of fibrin(ogen) and the status of fibrinolysis in tumor-derived interpleural effusate. Using intravenously injected (125)I-labeled rabbit fibrinogen as a marker, we found that fibrinogen (approximate blood concentration 1740 microg/mL) passed from blood to VX-2 tumor stroma, saturating the tumor at a concentration of approximately 348 microg fibrinogen/g in approximately 12 hours. We measured fibrin(ogen) fragments, at a concentration of approximately 292 microg/mL, in interpleural effusates that we recovered from 13% of the VX-2-burdened rabbits. Unreduced fibrin(ogen) fragments consisted of 4 major components with a relative molecular mass of approximately 250,000 (assumed to be fragment X; approximately 9% of total fragments from densitometry of immunoblots), 200,000 (d-dimer; 41%), 110,000 (fragment D; 49%), and 50,000 to 55,000 (fragment E; 1%-2%) kD. Total fibrin(ogen) fragments immunopurified from effusates exhibited an antiangiogenic effect when subjected to a chick embryo chorioallantoic membrane procedure. Interpleural effusates were devoid of plasmin activity or active plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 but contained plasmin complexes and active urokinase-like plasminogen activator (uPA), alpha(2)-antiplasmin, and thrombin-activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor. We speculate that VX-2 cells release uPA to activate fibrinolysis within the tumor stroma. Catabolic products of hemostasis (eg, fibrinolytic fragments, angiostatin) flux from the stroma into the interpleural space, thereby providing a net antiangiogenic property to the effusate and ultimately to the lymphatic and circulatory systems.


Subject(s)
Fibrin Fibrinogen Degradation Products/metabolism , Fibrinogen/metabolism , Lung Neoplasms/metabolism , Neovascularization, Pathologic/metabolism , Pleural Effusion/metabolism , Tumor Virus Infections/metabolism , Animals , Chick Embryo , Chickens , Chorion/blood supply , Chorion/drug effects , Disease Models, Animal , Fibrin Fibrinogen Degradation Products/pharmacology , Lung Neoplasms/pathology , Neovascularization, Pathologic/chemically induced , Pleural Effusion/pathology , Rabbits , Tumor Virus Infections/pathology
4.
J Lab Clin Med ; 139(5): 316-23, 2002 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12032493

ABSTRACT

Angiostatin (AST), a polypeptide with potent antiangiogenic properties, is released proteolytically from plasminogen in vivo. Plasminogen exists naturally in plasma as two glycoforms (PLGs), I and II. Recently it was shown with the use of a chick-embryo chorioallantoic membrane (CAM) assay that rabbit PLG-I and -II yield distinct ASTs-AST-I and -II, respectively-with different antiangiogenic activities. AST glycoforms were of similar molecular weight, approximately 30 to 32,000 kD, and probably consisted of kringles 1 to 3 only. AST has now been identified in the interpleural effusate released from VX-2 lung tumors in rabbits. Effusate was collected from six rabbits with high tumor burdens and fractionated by means of lysine-Sepharose chromatography. The epsilon-aminohexanoic acid-eluted protein of all effusates contained AST (kringles 1-3) at a mean concentration of 1.2 microg/mL of effusate; with regard to AST content, 97% was AST-II. A CAM assay revealed that the lysine-Sepharose-bound fraction from all interpleural effusates contained potent antiangiogenic activity. Blood and urine from rabbits with high burdens of VX-2 contained essentially only AST-II, at mean concentrations of 145 and 4 ng/mL, respectively. AST was absent from the blood of control rabbits. In an attempt to compare their uptake by VX-2, iodine 125-labeled AST-I and iodine 131-labeled AST-II were injected intravenously into tumor-bearing rabbits. AST-I entered the tumor 1.6 times faster than AST-II. As a means of accounting for the preponderance of AST-II in the interpleural effusate, we postulate that VX-2 cells release proteolytic activity to activate plasminogen but that of the two PLGs, PLG-II may be the preferred substrate for AST formation in vivo.


Subject(s)
Lung Neoplasms/metabolism , Peptide Fragments/analysis , Plasminogen/analysis , Pleural Effusion/chemistry , Protein Isoforms/analysis , Angiostatins , Animals , Blotting, Western , Chickens , Chromatography, Affinity , Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel , Humans , Iodine Radioisotopes , Lung Neoplasms/pathology , Molecular Weight , Neoplasm Transplantation , Peptide Fragments/metabolism , Plasminogen/metabolism , Protein Isoforms/metabolism , Rabbits , Tumor Cells, Cultured
5.
Thromb Res ; 108(5-6): 329-34, 2002 Dec 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12676194

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: We have recently described an experimental animal model of non-overt disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) in the rabbit in which the induction of tissue factor (TF) mRNA and TF antigen expression in peripheral blood leukocytes (PBL) was demonstrated to occur within 2 h of administration of low-dose endotoxin [Hematol. J. 2 (2001) 188]. In the present study, we demonstrate that the leukocyte TF expressed has procoagulant activity leading to a rapid decline in the concentration of factor VII (FVII) in rabbit plasma. METHODS: Total plasma FVII antigen and FVIIa were quantitated by rabbit FVII-specific immunoassay and FVIIa-specific clotting assays, respectively. Plasma samples from either saline-injected rabbits or rabbits administered a single bolus of 10 microg/kg Salmonella lipopolysaccharide were compared over a 24-h period. RESULTS: Total plasma FVII antigen decreased progressively post-endotoxin injection, reaching 71% of the baseline concentration at 8 h (p<0.001, n=18), and remained low (78%) at 24 h post-injection (p<0.01, n=16), returning to normal by 48 h. Plasma FVIIa levels increased to 120% within 2 h of endotoxin injection, fell to 73% of the baseline concentration at 8 h (p<0.05, n=18) and returned to normal by 24 h post-endotoxin administration. Procoagulant activity of rabbit peripheral blood leukocytes was enhanced at 2 h (p<0.01, n=6) and 4 h (p<0.05, n=6) post-endotoxin injection. The prothrombin time (PT) was increased by <3 s, and thrombin-antithrombin (TAT) complex formation was not significantly increased in the plasma of endotoxin-treated rabbits. No significant changes in total plasma FVII antigen, FVIIa or leukocyte procoagulant activity were observed in rabbits treated with saline. CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that the activation of FVII to FVIIa and rapid consumption of total FVII/FVIIa occur very early and likely are integral events linked to the initiation and propagation of non-overt DIC induced by endotoxin.


Subject(s)
Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation/blood , Factor VII/metabolism , Animals , Antithrombin III , Blood Coagulation , Disease Models, Animal , Endotoxins/pharmacology , Kinetics , Leukocytes/physiology , Male , Peptide Hydrolases/blood , Prothrombin Time , Rabbits
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