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SPP 1190:  The Tumour-Vessel Interface

Subject Area Medicine
Term from 2006 to 2012
Project identifier Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 12836250
 
The growth of blood vessels in tumours is one of the most important, if not the most important tumour-host interaction associated with tumour progression and metastasis. A multitude of cells, molecules and mechanisms controls the complex interactions between the tumour and the vascular compartments to regulate tumour progression and metastasis. While angiogenesis research has become one of the most rapidly growing and most competitive fields of ongoing biomedical research, much remains to be discovered in the context of cancer and this will only be achieved through effective networking and integrating efforts in the vascular and tumour biology fields.
A significantly advanced understanding of the multitude and complexity of tumour-vessel interactions holds the promise of not only improving our understanding of tumour progression mechanisms, but also paving the way towards novel avenues to diagnose and therapeutically interfere with tumours. Towards these goals, advanced in vitro and in vivo experimental strategies need to concentrate on tumour cells, blood and lymphatic vessel wall cells, and other recruited and resident stromal cells as a dynamic multicompartment cell-cell and cell-matrix interaction and communication system. The intricate interplay between different molecular systems including angiogenic and anti-angiogenic cytokines and their receptors, regulators of the proteolytic balance, adhesion and associated molecules, chemokines and their receptors as well as signalling molecules acting in these cellular compartments awaits detailed molecular and mechanistic analysis. Tumour microenvironmental conditioning by hypoxia and the thrombogenic milieu needs to be studied and its effect on the different cell populations within the tumour must be explored.
Interactions between the tumour and the vessel compartment relating to vessel intravasation, systemic dissemination, distant lodging and secondary site growth of metastasising tumour cells are poorly understood and await molecular characterisation.
The groups funded by the Priority Programme primarily concentrate on the following subjects: tumour angiogenesis, lymphatic tumour angiogenesis, intratumoural vessel differentiation, hypoxia, chemokines, cell adhesion, cell migration, invasion, inflammation, coagulation, novel animal models, imaging, translational vascular-oncological research.
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