Effect of Heparin, Heparin Fragments, and Corticosteroids on Cerebral Endothelial Cell Growth in vitro and in vivo
- 1 September 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Journal of Neuropathology and Experimental Neurology
- Vol. 45 (5) , 503-512
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00005072-198609000-00002
Abstract
Heparin and heparin fragments in combination with corticosteroids have been shown to markedly inhibit tumor angiogenesis. Experiments were performed to test the hypothesis that heparin, heparin fragments, and the combination of heparin and corticosteroids affect DNA synthesis and the proliferation of cerebral microvessel endothelium (ME). In vitro, methyl-3H-thymidine incorporation in the ME cells was measured after a 24 hour pulse. Our results show that heparin, hydrocortisone, and heparin in combination with hydrocortisone had a slight inhibitory effect on DNA synthesis of ME (p < 0.05), and hydrocortisone in combination with heparin had a slight inhibitory effect on ME cell growth (p < 0.05). The hexa-, octa-, and decasaccharide fragments of heparin stimulated DNA synthesis in ME (p < 0.01). In vivo. DNA synthesis in cerebral endothelial cells at the margin of a freeze lesion to mouse cerebral cortex was assayed by quantitation of labeling indexes from methyl-3H-thymidine autoradiographs in mice treated with heparin, cortisone, or a combination of heparin and cortisone. A mean endothelial cell labeling index (LI) of 6% in the cortisone-treated animals was significantly lower than controls (32%, p < 0.01). The addition of heparin to cortisone did not significantly alter the endothelial cell LI compared to the cortisone-treated animals, and heparin alone did not significantly alter the LI compared to the controls. These results indicate that cortisone markedly reduces the endothelial proliferation around a cortical freeze lesion in vivo. This effect is independent of heparin.This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Purification and characterization of heparinase from Flavobacterium heparinum.Journal of Biological Chemistry, 1985
- COOPERATION BETWEEN FIBRONECTIN AND HEPARIN IN THE MOBILIZATION OF CAPILLARY ENDOTHELIUM1985
- Heparin Binds Endothelial Cell Growth Factor, the Principal Endothelial Cell Mitogen in Bovine BrainScience, 1984
- Heparin Affinity: Purification of a Tumor-Derived Capillary Endothelial Cell Growth FactorScience, 1984
- The Role of the Macrophage in Microvascular Regeneration Following Brain InjuryJournal of Neuropathology and Experimental Neurology, 1983
- MOBILIZATION OF CAPILLARY ENDOTHELIUM INVITRO INDUCED BY EFFECTORS OF ANGIOGENESIS INVIVO1983
- Ceruloplasmin, Copper Ions, and Angiogenesis2JNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 1982
- Stimulation of nonlymphoid mesenchymal cell proliferation by a macrophage-derived growth factor.The Journal of Immunology, 1981
- Heparinase production by Flavobacterium heparinumApplied and Environmental Microbiology, 1981
- Mast cells and tumor angiogenesisInternational Journal of Cancer, 1976