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Vitamin E analogues inhibit angiogenesis by selective induction of apoptosis in proliferating endothelial cells: the role of oxidative stress (2007)

Abstract
''Mitocans'' from the vitamin E group of selective anticancer drugs, A-tocopheryl succinate (A-TOS) and its ether analogue A-TEA, triggered apoptosis in proliferating but not arrested endothelial cells. Angiogenic endothelial cells exposed to the vitamin E analogues, unlike their arrested counterparts, readily accumulated reactive oxygen species (ROS) by interfering with the mitochondrial redox chain and activating the intrinsic apoptotic pathway. The vitamin E analogues inhibited angiogenesis in vitro as assessed using the ''woundhealing'' and ''tube-forming'' models. Endothelial cells deficient in mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) were resistant to the vitamin E analogues, both in ROS accumulation and apoptosis induction, maintaining their angiogenic potential. A-TOS inhibited angiogenesis in a mouse cancer model, as documented by ultrasound imaging. We conclude that vitamin E analogues selectively kill angiogenic endothelial cells, suppressing tumor growth, which has intriguing clinical implications.

Publication details
Download http://hdl.handle.net/10072/19193
Publisher American Association for Cancer Research, United States, http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-07-3034
Repository ARROW Discovery Service (Australia)
Keywords health studies, 270106, Genomics Research Centre, heart, Cell Development (incl. Cell Division and Apoptosis)
Type journal article, journal article
Language English
Relation 24, Cancer Research, 11906, 11913, N, 67