Angiogenesis
During tumor angiogenesis, cancer cells stimulate formation of new blood vessel for delivering oxygen and nutrients to a tumor. As the tumor grows, cells at the center of the mass become starved of oxygen, causing hypoxia. It stabilizes the expression of a transcription factor, HIF-1α (hypoxia inducible factor-1), which binds HIF-1β to upregulate the expression of several angiogenesis-promoting genes. Moreover, growth factor signaling also stimulates HIF-1 activity in order to maintain oxygen homeostasis for growing cells.
- A8233 DMXAA (Vadimezan)2 CitationTarget: DT-diaphorasesSummary: Tumnor vascular disrupting agent, apoptosis inducer
- A8660 Cilengitide1 CitationTarget: IntegrinsSummary: Integrin inhibitor for αvβ3 and αvβ5
- B1115 BAY 87-2243Target: Hypoxia Inducible Factors (HIFs)Summary: HIF-1 inhibitor,potent and selective
- B3708 RGD (Arg-Gly-Asp) Peptides1 CitationTarget: Integrin-ligand interactionsSummary: Inhibits integrin binding to RGD motifs
- B7157 OGT 2115Target: HeparanasesSummary: Heparanase inhibitor