Melanoma Research - Identification, Causes, Prevention, Treatment

Melanoma Research Today is a free monthly online journal that collates and summarizes the latest research about Melanoma, including details on identification, causes, prevention, treatment.


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Anti-tumor activity of a combination of plasminogen activator and captopril in a human melanoma xenograft model.

de Groot-Besseling RR, Ruers TJ, van Kraats AA, Poelen GJ, Ruiter DJ, de Waal RM, Westphal JR

Department of Pathology, University Medical Center Nijmegen, Nijmegen, The Netherlands. r.besseling@pathol.umcn.nl

Angiostatin, a proteolytic fragment of plasminogen consisting of the first 3 or 4 kringle domains, reduces tumor growth by specifically inhibiting tumor angiogenesis. Angiostatin is generated in vitro in a 2-step process. First, plasminogen is converted to plasmin by plasminogen activators. Next, plasmin excises the angiostatin fragment from plasminogen, a process requiring molecules that are able to donate a free sulfhydryl group. In this study, we investigated whether stimulation of in vivo angiostatin generation by administration of plasminogen activator and a free sulfhydryl group donor (FSD) has anti-tumor activity. First, we determined the optimal conditions for in vitro angiostatin generation by incubating murine plasma with different concentrations of plasminogen activator and/or the FSD captopril. Angiostatin generation was monitored by western blot analysis. Our results were extrapolated to the in vivo situation by administering the optimal dose of tissue-type plasminogen activator (tPA, i.v. injection 3 times/week) and captopril (in drinking water) to mice and analyzing the presence of angiostatin in the circulation. Angiostatin was readily detectable in mice receiving both tPA and captopril, but not in mice receiving either one of the agents. Finally, the anti-tumor activity of the tPA/captopril treatment was tested in a human melanoma xenograft model. Administration of tPA alone had only a marginal effect on tumor growth. Captopril alone reduced tumor growth by about 60%, whereas treatment with both captopril and tPA resulted in 83% inhibition of tumor growth.

Published 7 September 2004 in Int J Cancer, 112(2): 329-34.
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Melanoma Books

What You Really Need to Know about Moles and Melanoma (A Johns Hopkins Press Health Book)

What You Really Need to Know about Moles and Melanoma (A Johns Hopkins Press Health Book)