Models for assessing anti-angiogenesis agents: Appraisal of current techniques

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Date

2017

Authors

Mousa, Shaker A.
Davis, Paul J.

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier

Abstract

A number of reproducible, technically satisfactory methods are available for experimentally measuring the anti- and proangiogenic activities of vascular growth factors, hormones, peptides, and pharmaceuticals. A group of widely used in vitro and in vivo assays for angiogenesis are reviewed here. The in vitro assays are the aortic ring, sprouting, and tube formation systems and the in vivo assays are the chick chorioallantoic membrane (CAM), the zebrafish, tumor xenografts in the immunocompromised mouse, and the Matrigel plug models. Human angiogenesis cannot be entirely reproduced in a single assay system. Thus, satisfactory preclinical anti- and proangiogenesis assay results do not assure clinical efficacy. Most of the assays discussed here, however, respond predictably to standard angiogenesis inhibitors and proangiogenesis factors and are cost effective.

Description

Keywords

Oncology, Pharmacology & pharmacy, Activated protein-kinase, In-vivo angiogenesis, Thyroid-hormone, Tetraiodothyroacetic acid, Capillary formation, Tumor angiogenesis, Basement-membrane, Cell interface, Chick-embryo, Vitro, Angiogenesis, Anti-angiogenesis, Aortic ring, Chick chorioallantoic membrane, Matrigel plug assay, Sprouting assay, Tube formation assay, Xenograft, Zebrafish

Citation

Mousa, S. A. vd. (2017). ''Models for assessing anti-angiogenesis agents: Appraisal of current techniques''. ed. Mousa, S. A. ve Davis, P. J. Anti-Angiogenesis Strategies in Cancer Therapies, 21-38.