An additional synthetic cyclic peptide harboring the hydrophobic C-terminal tail of ChM-I clearly mimicked the inhibitory action of this protein on the migration of HUVEC and successfully inhibited tumor angiogenesis and growth in a xenograft mouse model of human chondrosarcoma.
The BRICHOS domain was initially defined from sequence alignments of the Bri protein associated with familial dementia, chondromodulin associated with chondrosarcoma and surfactant protein C precursor (proSP-C) associated with respiratory distress syndrome and interstitial lung disease (ILD).
These results suggested that the expression of ChM-I gene in CS has no direct role in tumorigenesis but rather reflects the site of tumor development and therefore precursor of tumor cells.
These include BRI(2), which is related to familial British and Danish dementia (FBD and FDD); Chondromodulin-I (ChM-I), related to chondrosarcoma; CA11, related to stomach cancer; and surfactant protein C (SP-C), related to respiratory distress syndrome (RDS).
Here, we demonstrated that the level of ChM-I transcripts was substantially reduced to 100 or even less in the lower-grade chondrosarcomas, in articular cartilage or other benign cartilage tumors.