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View the Table of Contents for the August 15 issue of Cancer Research.
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Cholangiocarcinoma is a poorly understood, aggressive malignancy with a poor prognosis. Leptin, a circulating hormone found at high concentrations in obese people, has been shown to play an important role in the regulation of angiogenesis and growth of several cancers. Fava and colleagues found that leptin enhances the proliferation and migration of cholangiocarcinoma cells in vitro through STAT-3–dependent activation of ERK1/2. In vivo, the authors show that the genetic ablation of leptin-mediated signaling inhibits cancer development and growth in an animal model of cholangiocarcinoma. These results implicate leptin-mediated signaling in the growth of biliary malignancies.
Ho-Tin-Noé et al. Page 6851 Platelets have been shown to promote cancer metastasis. Ho-Tin-Noé and colleagues report that platelets also support tumor homeostasis. Induction of thrombocytopenia in tumor-bearing animals immediately resulted in tumor hemorrhage that was independent of the tumor age, type, and localization. The authors found that this platelet activity was independent of platelet adhesion receptors essential for primary hemostasis but dependent on the presence of platelet storage granules containing growth factors, and vasoactive and angiogenic compounds. Identification of the platelet-derived tumor factor(s) involved in tumor vasculature stabilization would allow manipulation of tumor blood vessels. Specific destabilization of tumor vasculature may represent a strategy to enhance the delivery of chemotherapeutic agents or increase antitumor immunity through better exposure of tumor antigens.
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