| 2-Methoxyestradiol | |
| 1,3,5(10)-ESTRATRIEN-2,3,17b-TRIOL 2-METHYLETHER | |
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2-Methoxyestradiol
is a drug that prevents the formation of new blood vessels that tumors need in
order to grow(angiogenesis). It is derived from estrogen and belongs to the
family of drugs called angiogenesis inhibitors (a chemical which signals the
process of angiogenesis to stop).
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Angiogenesis
is the physiological process involving the formation of new blood vessels from
pre-existing vessels. This is a normal process in growth and development, as
well as in wound healing. However, this is also a fundamental step in the
transition of tumors from a dormant state to a malignant state.
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Cancer cells
are cells that have lost control of their ability to divide in a controlled
fashion. A tumor consists of a population of rapidly dividing and growing cancer
cells. Mutations rapidly accrue within the population. These mutations
(variation) allow the cancer cells (or sub-populations of cancer cells within a
tumor) to develop drug resistance and escape therapy. Tumors cannot grow beyond
a certain size, generally 1-2 mm3, due to a lack of oxygen and other essential
nutrients.
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Tumors
induce blood vessel growth (angiogenesis) by secreting various growth factors (
e.g. Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor or VEGF). Growth factors, such as bFGF
and VEGF can induce capillary growth into the tumor, supplying required
nutrients and allowing for tumor expansion. Thus angiogenesis is a necessary and
required step for transition from a small harmless cluster of cells, to a large
tumor. Angiogenesis is also required for the spread of a tumor, or metastasis.
Single cancer cells can break away from an established solid tumor, enter the
blood vessel, and be carried to a distant site, where they can implant and begin
the growth of a secondary tumor. Evidence now suggests that the blood vessel in
a given solid tumor may be in fact be mosaic vessels, comprised of endothelial
cells and tumor cells. This mosaicity allows for substantial shedding of tumor
cells into the vasculature. The subsequent growth of such metastases will also
require a supply of nutrients and oxygen.
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Endothelial cells
are much more genomically stable than cancer cells, and have a doubling time of
approx 120 days. The genomic stability allied to their longevity (compared to
the tumor cell), makes then an ideal target for therapies directed against them.
They will not 'escape' therapy, as they will not undergo mitosis at such a rapid
rate and carry any drug resistance variation through to the next generation
within the lifespan of the therapy.
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Angiogenesis
research is a cutting edge field in cancer research, and recent evidence also
suggests that traditional therapies, such as radiation therapy, may actually
work in part by targeting the genomically stable endothelial cell compartment,
rather than the genomicaly unstable tumor cell compartment. In short, the
therapy is the selection agent which is being used to kill a cell compartment.
Tumor cells evolve resistance rapidly due to rapid generation time (days) and
genomic instability (variation), whereas endothelial cells are a good target
because of a long generation time (months) and genomic stability
(low variation).
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This is a prime example of evolution in action at the cellular level, using a
selection pressure to target and differentiate between varying populations of
cells. The end result is the extinction of one species or population of cells
(endothelial cells), followed by the collapse of the ecosystem (the tumor).
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Angiogenesis-based
tumour therapy relies on the existence of natural angiogenesis inhibitors like
angiostatin, endostatin and tumstatin. These are proteins that mainly originate
as specific fragments pre-existing structural proteins like collagen or
plasminogen.
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Product: 1895-5 | |