Different effects of glucose starvation on expression and stability of VEGF mRNA isoforms in murine ovarian cancer cells. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) has been implicated as a potent regulator of angiogenesis in tumors, and its protein exists as at least five isoforms with distinct biologic activities and clinical significance. Tumors under metabolic stress conditions dramatically increase VEGF expression due to both increased transcription and decreased mRNA degradation. However, it is not known how stress conditions regulate expression of each VEGF isoform. Here, we report a novel Taqman real-time RT-PCR strategy for quantification of all murine VEGF isoforms and find that (1) glucose starvation dramatically up-regulates the mRNA level of all VEGF isoforms, with the three abundant isoforms, VEGF120, VEGF164, and VEGF188, increasing at a similar rate, while the rare isoform VEGF144 is more markedly up-regulated; (2) glucose starvation induces a significant increase of the relative abundance of VEGF144 mRNA, but not the more prevalent isoforms VEGF120, VEGF164, and VEGF188, compared to total VEGF; and (3) the stability of each isoform mRNA differs under the control conditions as well as glucose starvation. The latter significantly stabilizes mRNA of all VEGF isoforms at a different rate, with VEGF144 most significantly stabilized. Our results indicate that under metabolic stress conditions VEGF144 is the most dramatically up-regulated VEGF isoform, probably through mechanism(s) different from the three abundant VEGF isoforms.

publication date

  • April 12, 2002

Research

keywords

  • Endothelial Growth Factors
  • Glucose
  • Lymphokines
  • Ovarian Neoplasms
  • RNA Stability
  • RNA, Neoplasm

Identity

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 0036297353

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1006/bbrc.2002.6710

PubMed ID

  • 11944893

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 292

issue

  • 4