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PPARα agonist fenofibrate suppresses tumor growth through direct and indirect angiogenesis inhibition

Authors :
Andrea Laforme
Sui Huang
Catherine Butterfield
Judah Folkman
Arja Kaipainen
Deviney Chaponis
Michael Fannon
Dipak Panigrahy
Mark W. Kieran
Carmen M. Barnés
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
National Academy of Sciences, 2008.

Abstract

Angiogenesis and inflammation are central processes through which the tumor microenvironment influences tumor growth. We have demonstrated recently that peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR)alpha deficiency in the host leads to overt inflammation that suppresses angiogenesis via excess production of thrombospondin (TSP)-1 and prevents tumor growth. Hence, we speculated that pharmacologic activation of PPARalpha would promote tumor growth. Surprisingly, the PPARalpha agonist fenofibrate potently suppressed primary tumor growth in mice. This effect was not mediated by cancer-cell-autonomous antiproliferative mechanisms but by the inhibition of angiogenesis and inflammation in the host tissue. Although PPARalpha-deficient tumors were still susceptible to fenofibrate, absence of PPARalpha in the host animal abrogated the potent antitumor effect of fenofibrate. In addition, fenofibrate suppressed endothelial cell proliferation and VEGF production, increased TSP-1 and endostatin, and inhibited corneal neovascularization. Thus, both genetic abrogation of PPARalpha as well as its activation by ligands cause tumor suppression via overlapping antiangiogenic pathways. These findings reveal the potential utility of the well tolerated PPARalpha agonists beyond their use as lipid-lowering drugs in anticancer therapy. Our results provide a mechanistic rationale for evaluating the clinical benefits of PPARalpha agonists in cancer treatment, alone and in combination with other therapies.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....399f784f52ee3f2d5b7e419b614ff846