TY - JOUR
T1 - Identification of a transiently exposed VE-cadherin epitope that allows for specific targeting of an antibody to the tumor neovasculature
AU - May, Chad
AU - Doody, Jacqueline R.
AU - Abdullah, Rashed
AU - Balderes, Paul
AU - Xu, Xiaohong
AU - Chien, Peter Chen
AU - Zhu, Zhenping
AU - Shapiro, Lawrence
AU - Kussie, Paul
AU - Hicklin, Daniel J.
AU - Liao, Fang
AU - Bohlen, Peter
PY - 2005/6/1
Y1 - 2005/6/1
N2 - VE-cadherin is an adhesion molecule localized at the adherens junctions of endothelial cells. It is crucial for the proper assembly of vascular structures during angiogenesis and maintaining vascular integrity. We have studied 3 monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) against murine VE-cadherin that inhibit angiogenesis and tumor growth. Two of these, BV13 and 10G4, also disrupted normal vessels, resulting in severe vascular leakage, whereas the third, E4G10, did not. The goal of the current report was to identify the epitope of E4G10 and distinguish it from those of the disruptive mAbs. We mapped the epitope of E4G10 to within the first 10 amino acids of mature VE-cadherin and demonstrated that conserved tryptophan residues in this sequence are required for VE-cadherin-mediated trans-adhesion. The disruptive mAbs target a different epitope within amino acids 45 to 56, which structural homology modeling suggests is not involved in trans-adhesion. From our studies, we hypothesize that E4G10 can only bind the neovasculature, where VE-cadherin has not yet engaged in trans-adhesion and its epitope is fully exposed. Thus, E4G10 can inhibit junction formation and angiogenesis but is unable to target normal vasculature because its epitope is masked. In contrast, BV13 and 10G4 bind an epitope that is accessible regardless of VE-cadherin interactions, leading to the disruption of adherens junctions. Our findings establish the immediate N-terminal region of VE-cadherin as a novel target for inhibiting angiogenesis.
AB - VE-cadherin is an adhesion molecule localized at the adherens junctions of endothelial cells. It is crucial for the proper assembly of vascular structures during angiogenesis and maintaining vascular integrity. We have studied 3 monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) against murine VE-cadherin that inhibit angiogenesis and tumor growth. Two of these, BV13 and 10G4, also disrupted normal vessels, resulting in severe vascular leakage, whereas the third, E4G10, did not. The goal of the current report was to identify the epitope of E4G10 and distinguish it from those of the disruptive mAbs. We mapped the epitope of E4G10 to within the first 10 amino acids of mature VE-cadherin and demonstrated that conserved tryptophan residues in this sequence are required for VE-cadherin-mediated trans-adhesion. The disruptive mAbs target a different epitope within amino acids 45 to 56, which structural homology modeling suggests is not involved in trans-adhesion. From our studies, we hypothesize that E4G10 can only bind the neovasculature, where VE-cadherin has not yet engaged in trans-adhesion and its epitope is fully exposed. Thus, E4G10 can inhibit junction formation and angiogenesis but is unable to target normal vasculature because its epitope is masked. In contrast, BV13 and 10G4 bind an epitope that is accessible regardless of VE-cadherin interactions, leading to the disruption of adherens junctions. Our findings establish the immediate N-terminal region of VE-cadherin as a novel target for inhibiting angiogenesis.
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U2 - 10.1182/blood-2005-01-0010
DO - 10.1182/blood-2005-01-0010
M3 - Article
C2 - 15701713
AN - SCOPUS:21144433924
SN - 0006-4971
VL - 105
SP - 4337
EP - 4344
JO - Blood
JF - Blood
IS - 11
ER -