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Blood, 15 June 2007, Vol. 109, No. 12, pp. 5076.
Monocytes TIE(2)d up in murky business1 UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA
TIE2-expressing monocytes, a specialized population of tumor-infiltrating monocytes committed to promoting angiogenesis, are now found also in human tumors.
In the mouse, Gr-1+ CD11b+ tumor monocytes (or myeloid suppressor cells) promote angiogenesis via paracrine mechanisms and function as vascular-cell precursors.2 Similarly, VEGFR-1+ CD11b+ monocytes are recruited by vascular endothelial growth factor and exert proangiogenic activity in mouse tumors. Additional monocyte precursors committed to tumor angiogenesis and possibly vasculogenesis include the vascular leukocytes, a subset of CD11c+ MHC-II+ dendritic-cell precursors expressing endothelial vascular markers VE-cadherin, CD34, and CD146. In the mouse, these have been recruited to tumors via CCR6, whereupon they greatly accelerated tumor vascularization and growth.3 Human vascular leukocytes have been described in high numbers in human ovarian cancer and have been shown to form human neovessels in the mouse, demonstrating vascular commitment.4 Venneri and colleagues have shown that human TIE2-expressing monocytes also demonstrate clear commitment to tumor angiogenesis, as they can migrate towards angiopoietin-2, a TIE2 ligand released by activated endothelial cells and angiogenic vessels, and that they largely contribute to the tumor angiogenic process in vivo. The discovery of these tumor-bound monocyte populations offers numerous therapeutic opportunities. First, given the propensity of TEMs as well as vascular leukocytes (VLCs) and possibly other TAMs to home to tumors, and specifically to the tumor vasculature, they can be used as cellular vectors to deliver therapeutic payloads to these targets in a "Trojan horse" cell-based therapy approach. Second, their selective elimination is expected to provide therapeutic benefit. Previous evidence in the mouse has shown that depletion of TEMs through genetic manipulation5 or of VLCs through immunotoxic methods4 prevented angiogenesis and induced tumor regression. Identifying specific molecular targets in these populations will therefore be important in achieving selective elimination without toxicity, but could yield important results in the clinic. Finally, understanding the mechanisms that induce the differentiation of myeloid precursors towards these lineages may provide novel ways to re-educate these cells towards a tumoricidal, rather than a cancerophilic, phenotype. Time will show whether one or more of these tumor-infiltrating monocyte populations represent indeed one of tumors' Achilles heels in the human.
Footnotes
Conflict-of-interest disclosure: The author declares no competing financial interests.
REFERENCES
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