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Dive into the research topics where Noel P. Bouck is active.

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Featured researches published by Noel P. Bouck.


Cell | 1998

Thrombospondin-1 Is a Major Activator of TGF-β1 In Vivo

Susan E. Crawford; Veronica Stellmach; Joanne E. Murphy-Ullrich; Solange M. F. Ribeiro; Jack Lawler; Richard O. Hynes; Gregory P. Boivin; Noel P. Bouck

The activity of TGF-beta1 is regulated primarily extracellularly where the secreted latent form must be modified to expose the active molecule. Here we show that thrombospondin-1 is responsible for a significant proportion of the activation of TGF-beta1 in vivo. Histological abnormalities in young TGF-beta1 null and thrombospondin-1 null mice were strikingly similar in nine organ systems. Lung and pancreas pathologies similar to those observed in TGF-beta1 null animals could be induced in wild-type pups by systemic treatment with a peptide that blocked the activation of TGF-beta1 by thrombospondin-1. Although these organs produced little active TGF-beta1 in thrombospondin null mice, when pups were treated with a peptide derived from thrombospondin-1 that could activate TGF-beta1, active cytokine was detected in situ, and the lung and pancreatic abnormalities reverted toward wild type.


Nature Medicine | 2000

Signals leading to apoptosis-dependent inhibition of neovascularization by thrombospondin-1

Benilde Jiménez; Olga V. Volpert; Susan E. Crawford; Maria Febbraio; Roy L. Silverstein; Noel P. Bouck

Thrombospondin-1 (TSP-1) is a naturally occurring inhibitor of angiogenesis that limits vessel density in normal tissues and curtails tumor growth. Here, we show that the inhibition of angiogenesis in vitro and in vivo and the induction of apoptosis by thrombospondin-1 all required the sequential activation of CD36, p59fyn, caspase-3 like proteases and p38 mitogen-activated protein kinases. We also detected increased endothelial cell apoptosis in situ at the margins of tumors in mice treated with thrombospondin-1. These results indicate that thrombospondin-1, and possibly other broad-spectrum natural inhibitors of angiogenesis, act in vivo by inducing receptor-mediated apoptosis in activated microvascular endothelial cells.


Advances in Cancer Research | 1996

How tumors become angiogenic.

Noel P. Bouck; Veronica Stellmach; Stephanie C. Hsu

Publisher Summary As normal cells progress to tumorigenicity, they must develop two distinct new characteristics not possessed by the normal cells from which they arise: they must become able to multiply without restraint and they must be able to create in vivo an environment where this newly acquired growth potential can be realized. Normal cells are antiangiogenic, because they secrete only low levels of inducers of angiogenesis and high levels of molecules that inhibit neovascularization. These cells develop into successful tumors that are potently angiogenic and secrete high levels of a cocktail of molecules that induce neovascularization. It is possible to halt the production and/or release of angiogenic activity by tumor cells themselves using retinoic acid and similar compounds. Endothelial cells that form the vessels that support tumor growth can be disabled in two distinct ways. Antiangiogenic agents have distinct advantages over conventional cytotoxic cancer therapies. Although the importance of angiogenesis to the growth of tumors is now well established, the mechanism by which tumor cells develop this crucial ability to attract new blood vessels is just beginning to be explored. Available data suggest that the angiogenic phenotype develops gradually as a result of many of the same genetic changes in oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes that are also responsible for the deregulation of cell growth. The inhibitors of angiogenesis offer a new and promising avenue for tumor therapy.


Cell | 1989

Regulation of the activity of a new inhibitor of angiogenesis by a cancer suppressor gene

Farzan Rastinejad; Peter J. Polverini; Noel P. Bouck

An inhibitor has been identified in the conditioned medium of hamster cells and hamster-human hybrids that suppresses neovascularization in vivo in the rat cornea. Inhibitory activity was tightly linked to the presence of an active cancer suppressor gene in transformants and revertants, in segregating hybrids, and in temperature-limited transformants. It copurified with a approximately 140 kd glycoprotein. Polyclonal antiserum raised against the purified preparation recognized a 140 kd protein in conditioned medium and was able to adsorb out all antiangiogenic activity. These results define the control of the activity of an inhibitor of neovascularization as one function of the cancer suppressor gene active in BHK21/cl13 cells and simultaneously identify a new inhibitor of angiogenesis, a process vital to the growth of solid tumors.


Nature Medicine | 2000

Maspin is an angiogenesis inhibitor

Ming Zhang; Olga V. Volpert; Yihui H. Shi; Noel P. Bouck

Maspin, a unique member of the serpin family, is a secreted protein encoded by a class II tumor suppressor gene whose downregulation is associated with the development of breast and prostate cancers. Overexpression of maspin in breast tumor cells limits their growth and metastases in vivo. In this report we demonstrate that maspin is an effective inhibitor of angiogenesis. In vitro, it acted directly on cultured endothelial cells to stop their migration towards basic fibroblast growth factor and vascular endothelial growth factor and to limit mitogenesis and tube formation. In vivo, it blocked neovascularization in the rat cornea pocket model. Maspin derivatives mutated in the serpin reactive site lost their ability to inhibit the migration of fibroblasts, keratinocytes, and breast cancer cells but were still able to block angiogenesis in vitro and in vivo. When maspin was delivered locally to human prostate tumor cells in a xenograft mouse model, it blocked tumor growth and dramatically reduced the density of tumor-associated microvessels. These data suggest that the tumor suppressor activity of maspin may depend in large part on its ability to inhibit angiogenesis and raise the possibility that maspin and similar serpins may be excellent leads for the development of drugs that modulate angiogenesis.


Nature Medicine | 2002

Inducer-stimulated Fas targets activated endothelium for destruction by anti-angiogenic thrombospondin-1 and pigment epithelium–derived factor

Olga V. Volpert; Tetiana Zaichuk; Wei Zhou; Frank Reiher; Thomas A. Ferguson; P. Michael Stuart; Mohammad A. Amin; Noel P. Bouck

Natural inhibitors of angiogenesis are able to block pathological neovascularization without harming the preexisting vasculature. Here we show that two such inhibitors, thrombospondin-1 and pigment epithelium–derived factor, derive specificity for remodeling vessels from their dependence on Fas/Fas ligand (FasL)-mediated apoptosis to block angiogenesis. Both inhibitors upregulated FasL on endothelial cells. Expression of the essential partner of FasL, Fas/CD95 receptor, was low on quiescent endothelial cells and vessels but greatly enhanced by inducers of angiogenesis, thereby specifically sensitizing the stimulated cells to apoptosis by inhibitor-generated FasL. The anti-angiogenic activity of thrombospondin-1 and pigment epithelium–derived factor both in vitro and in vivo was dependent on this dual induction of Fas and FasL and the resulting apoptosis. This example of cooperation between pro- and anti-angiogenic factors in the inhibition of angiogenesis provides one explanation for the ability of inhibitors to select remodeling capillaries for destruction.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001

Prevention of ischemia-induced retinopathy by the natural ocular antiangiogenic agent pigment epithelium-derived factor

Veronica Stellmach; Susan E. Crawford; Wei Zhou; Noel P. Bouck

Aberrant blood vessel growth in the retina that underlies the pathology of proliferative diabetic retinopathy and retinopathy of prematurity is the result of the ischemia-driven disruption of the normally antiangiogenic environment of the retina. In this study, we show that a potent inhibitor of angiogenesis found naturally in the normal eye, pigment epithelium-derived growth factor (PEDF), inhibits such aberrant blood vessel growth in a murine model of ischemia-induced retinopathy. Inhibition was proportional to dose and systemic delivery of recombinant protein at daily doses as low as 2.2 mg/kg could prevent aberrant endothelial cells from crossing the inner limiting membrane. PEDF appeared to inhibit angiogenesis by causing apoptosis of activated endothelial cells, because it induced apoptosis in cultured endothelial cells and an 8-fold increase in apoptotic endothelial cells could be detected in situ when the ischemic retinas of PEDF-treated animals were compared with vehicle-treated controls. The ability of low doses of PEDF to curtail aberrant growth of ocular endothelial cells without overt harm to retinal morphology suggests that this natural protein may be beneficial in the treatment of a variety of retinal vasculopathies.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1996

Captopril inhibits angiogenesis and slows the growth of experimental tumors in rats.

Olga V. Volpert; William F. Ward; Mark W. Lingen; Louis Chesler; Dennis B. Solt; Mark D. Johnson; Agostino Molteni; Peter J. Polverini; Noel P. Bouck

Captopril, an inhibitor of angiotensin converting enzyme, is widely used clinically to manage hypertension and congestive heart failure. Here captopril is shown to be an inhibitor of angiogenesis able to block neovascularization induced in the rat cornea. Captopril acted directly and specifically on capillary endothelial cells, inhibiting their chemotaxis with a biphasic dose-response curve showing an initial decrease at clinically achievable doses under 10 microM and a further slow decline in the millimolar range. Captopril inhibition of endothelial cell migration was not mediated by angiotensin converting enzyme inhibition, but was suppressed by zinc. Direct inhibition by captopril of zinc-dependent endothelial cell-derived 72-and 92-kD metalloproteinases known to be essential for angiogenesis was also seen. When used systemically on rats captopril inhibited corneal neovascularization and showed the antitumor activity expected of an inhibitor of angiogenesis, decreasing the number of mitoses present in carcinogen-induced foci of preneoplastic liver cells and slowing the growth rate of an experimental fibrosarcoma whose cells were resistant to captopril in vitro. These data define this widely used drug as a new inhibitor of neovascularization and raise the possibility that patients on long term captopril therapy may derive unexpected benefits from its antiangiogenic activities.


Nature Medicine | 2003

Pigment epithelium-derived factor regulates the vasculature and mass of the prostate and pancreas

Jennifer A. Doll; Veronica Stellmach; Noel P. Bouck; Anders Bergh; Chung Lee; Lisa P. Abramson; Mona Cornwell; Michael Pins; Jayme Borensztajn; Susan E. Crawford

Angiogenesis sustains tumor growth and metastasis, and recent studies indicate that the vascular endothelium regulates tissue mass. In the prostate, androgens drive angiogenic inducers to stimulate growth, whereas androgen withdrawal leads to decreased vascular endothelial growth factor, vascular regression and epithelial cell apoptosis. Here, we identify the angiogenesis inhibitor pigment epithelium–derived factor (PEDF) as a key inhibitor of stromal vasculature and epithelial tissue growth in mouse prostate and pancreas. In PEDF-deficient mice, stromal vessels were increased and associated with epithelial cell hyperplasia. Androgens inhibited prostatic PEDF expression in cultured cells. In vivo, androgen ablation increased PEDF in normal rat prostates and in human cancer biopsies. Exogenous PEDF induced tumor epithelial apoptosis in vitro and limited in vivo tumor xenograft growth, triggering endothelial apoptosis. Thus, PEDF regulates normal pancreas and prostate mass. Its androgen sensitivity makes PEDF a likely contributor to the anticancer effects of androgen ablation.


Trends in Molecular Medicine | 2002

PEDF: anti-angiogenic guardian of ocular function.

Noel P. Bouck

Sight-threatening eye diseases can be caused and exacerbated by the aberrant growth of new blood vessels. Recent work indicates that this neovascularization not only is a response to a rise in the local concentration of molecules that induce such angiogenesis but also requires a fall in the levels of endogenous molecules that inhibit angiogenesis. One of the most potent of these endogenous inhibitors is pigment epithelium-derived factor (PEDF), which serves as a survival factor for neuronal components of the eye as well as an essential inhibitor of the growth of ocular blood vessels. Its anti-angiogenic activity is selective in that it is effective against newly forming vessels but spares existing ones, and it is reversible. The molecular basis for this delicate control of endothelial cells is beginning to be understood and strategies to test the ability of PEDF to ameliorate or prevent vessel damage in the eye are developing rapidly.

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Susan E. Crawford

NorthShore University HealthSystem

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Frank Reiher

Northwestern University

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