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The Role of the TGF-beta Coreceptor Endoglin in Cancer

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2010
262.pdf (1.522Mb)
Authors
Perez-Gomez, Eduardo
del Castillo, Gaelle
Santibanez, Juan
Miguel Lopez-Novoa, Jose
Bernabeu, Carmelo
Quintanilla, Miguel
Article (Published version)
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Abstract
Endoglin (CD105) is an auxiliary membrane receptor of transforming growth factor beta (TGF-beta) that interacts with type I and type II TGF-beta receptors and modulates TGF-beta signaling. Endoglin is overexpressed in the tumor-associated vascular endothelium, where it modulates angiogenesis. This feature makes endoglin a promising target for antiangiogenic cancer therapy. In addition, recent studies on human and experimental models of carcinogenesis point to an important tumor cell-autonomous role of endoglin by regulating proliferation, migration, invasion, and metastasis. These studies suggest that endoglin behaves as a suppressor of malignancy in experimental and human epithelial carcinogenesis, although it can also promote metastasis in other types of cancer. In this review, we evaluate the implication of endoglin in tumor development underlying studies developed in our laboratories in recent years.
Keywords:
endoglin (CD105) / TGF-beta / angiogenesis / cancer / migration / invasion / malignant progression
Source:
Thescientificworldjournal, 2010, 10, 2367-2384
Publisher:
  • Hindawi Ltd, London
Funding / projects:
  • Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation, Spanish Government [SAF2007-63821, SAF2007-63893, SAF2007-61827]
  • Instituto de Salud Carlos IIIInstituto de Salud Carlos IIIEuropean Commission [ISCIII-CIBER CB/06/07/0038, ISCIII-RD06/0016]
  • Centro de Investigacion Biomedica en Red (CIBER) de Enfermedades Raras
  • Scientific Foundation of the Asociacion Espanola contra el Cancer

DOI: 10.1100/tsw.2010.230

ISSN: 1537-744X

PubMed: 21170488

WoS: 000286474400007

Scopus: 2-s2.0-78650255998
[ Google Scholar ]
86
72
URI
http://rimi.imi.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/265
Collections
  • Radovi istraživača / Researchers' publications
Institution/Community
Institut za medicinska istraživanja
TY  - JOUR
AU  - Perez-Gomez, Eduardo
AU  - del Castillo, Gaelle
AU  - Santibanez, Juan
AU  - Miguel Lopez-Novoa, Jose
AU  - Bernabeu, Carmelo
AU  - Quintanilla, Miguel
PY  - 2010
UR  - http://rimi.imi.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/265
AB  - Endoglin (CD105) is an auxiliary membrane receptor of transforming growth factor beta (TGF-beta) that interacts with type I and type II TGF-beta receptors and modulates TGF-beta signaling. Endoglin is overexpressed in the tumor-associated vascular endothelium, where it modulates angiogenesis. This feature makes endoglin a promising target for antiangiogenic cancer therapy. In addition, recent studies on human and experimental models of carcinogenesis point to an important tumor cell-autonomous role of endoglin by regulating proliferation, migration, invasion, and metastasis. These studies suggest that endoglin behaves as a suppressor of malignancy in experimental and human epithelial carcinogenesis, although it can also promote metastasis in other types of cancer. In this review, we evaluate the implication of endoglin in tumor development underlying studies developed in our laboratories in recent years.
PB  - Hindawi Ltd, London
T2  - Thescientificworldjournal
T1  - The Role of the TGF-beta Coreceptor Endoglin in Cancer
EP  - 2384
SP  - 2367
VL  - 10
DO  - 10.1100/tsw.2010.230
UR  - conv_2455
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Perez-Gomez, Eduardo and del Castillo, Gaelle and Santibanez, Juan and Miguel Lopez-Novoa, Jose and Bernabeu, Carmelo and Quintanilla, Miguel",
year = "2010",
abstract = "Endoglin (CD105) is an auxiliary membrane receptor of transforming growth factor beta (TGF-beta) that interacts with type I and type II TGF-beta receptors and modulates TGF-beta signaling. Endoglin is overexpressed in the tumor-associated vascular endothelium, where it modulates angiogenesis. This feature makes endoglin a promising target for antiangiogenic cancer therapy. In addition, recent studies on human and experimental models of carcinogenesis point to an important tumor cell-autonomous role of endoglin by regulating proliferation, migration, invasion, and metastasis. These studies suggest that endoglin behaves as a suppressor of malignancy in experimental and human epithelial carcinogenesis, although it can also promote metastasis in other types of cancer. In this review, we evaluate the implication of endoglin in tumor development underlying studies developed in our laboratories in recent years.",
publisher = "Hindawi Ltd, London",
journal = "Thescientificworldjournal",
title = "The Role of the TGF-beta Coreceptor Endoglin in Cancer",
pages = "2384-2367",
volume = "10",
doi = "10.1100/tsw.2010.230",
url = "conv_2455"
}
Perez-Gomez, E., del Castillo, G., Santibanez, J., Miguel Lopez-Novoa, J., Bernabeu, C.,& Quintanilla, M.. (2010). The Role of the TGF-beta Coreceptor Endoglin in Cancer. in Thescientificworldjournal
Hindawi Ltd, London., 10, 2367-2384.
https://doi.org/10.1100/tsw.2010.230
conv_2455
Perez-Gomez E, del Castillo G, Santibanez J, Miguel Lopez-Novoa J, Bernabeu C, Quintanilla M. The Role of the TGF-beta Coreceptor Endoglin in Cancer. in Thescientificworldjournal. 2010;10:2367-2384.
doi:10.1100/tsw.2010.230
conv_2455 .
Perez-Gomez, Eduardo, del Castillo, Gaelle, Santibanez, Juan, Miguel Lopez-Novoa, Jose, Bernabeu, Carmelo, Quintanilla, Miguel, "The Role of the TGF-beta Coreceptor Endoglin in Cancer" in Thescientificworldjournal, 10 (2010):2367-2384,
https://doi.org/10.1100/tsw.2010.230 .,
conv_2455 .

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