24 resultados para vascular targeting
em Doria (National Library of Finland DSpace Services) - National Library of Finland, Finland
Resumo:
Background: Atherosclerosis begins in early life progressing from asymptomatic to symptomatic as we age. Although substantial progress has been made in identifying the determinants of atherosclerosis in middle to older age adults at increased cardiovascular risk, there is lack of data examining determinants and prediction of atherosclerosis in young adults. Aims: The current study was designed to investigate levels of cardiovascular risk factors in young adults, subclinical measures of atherosclerosis, and prediction of subclinical arterial changes with conventional risk factor measures and novel metabolic profiling of serum samples. Subjects and Methods: This thesis utilised data from the follow-ups performed in 2001 and 2007 in the Cardiovascular Risk in Young Finns study, a Finnish population-based prospective cohort study that examined 2,204 subjects who were aged 30-45 years in 2007. Subclinical atherosclerosis was studied using noninvasive ultrasound measurements of carotid intima-media thickness (IMT), carotid arterial distensibility (CDist) and brachial flow-mediated dilation (FMD). Measurements included conventional risk factors and metabolic profiling using highthroughput nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) methods that provided data on 42 lipid markers and 16 circulating metabolites. Results: Trends in lipids were favourable between 2001 and 2007, whereas waist circumference, fasting glucose, and blood pressure levels increased. To study the stability of noninvasive ultrasound markers, 6-year tracking (the likelihood to maintain the original fractile over time) in 6 years was examined. IMT tracked more strongly than CDist and FMD. Cardiovascular risk scores (Framingham, SCORE, Finrisk, Reynolds and PROCAM) predicted subclinical atherosclerosis equally. Lipoprotein subclass testing did not improve the prediction of subclinical atherosclerosis over and above conventional risk factors. However, circulating metabolites improved risk stratification. Tyrosine and docosahexaenoic acid were found to be novel biomarkers of high IMT. Conclusions: Prediction of cardiovascular risk in young Finnish adults can be performed with any of the existing risk scores. The addition of metabonomics to risk stratification improves prediction of subclinical changes and enables more accurate targeting of prevention at an early stage.
Resumo:
The golden standard in nuclear medicine imaging of inflammation is the use of radiolabeled leukocytes. Although their diagnostic accuracy is good, the preparation of the leukocytes is both laborious and potentially hazardous for laboratory personnel. Molecules involved in leukocyte migration could serve as targets for the development of inflammation imaging agents. An excellent target would be a molecule that is absent or expressed at low level in normal tissues, but is induced or up-regulated at the site of inflammation. Vascular adhesion protein-1 (VAP-1) is a very promising target for in vivo imaging, since it is translocated to the endothelial cell surface when inflammation occurs. VAP-1 functions as an endothelial adhesion molecule that participates in leukocyte recruitment to inflamed tissues. Besides being an adhesion molecule, VAP-1 also has enzymatic activity. In this thesis, the targeting of VAP-1 was studied by using Gallium-68 (68Ga) labeled peptides and an Iodine-124 (124I) labeled antibody. The peptides were designed based on molecular modelling and phage display library searches. The new imaging agents were preclinically tested in vitro, as well as in vivo in animal models. The most promising imaging agent appeared to be a peptide belonging to the VAP-1 leukocyte ligand, Siglec-9 peptide. The 68Ga-labeled Siglec-9 peptide was able to detect VAP-1 positive vasculature in rodent models of sterile skin inflammation and melanoma by positron emission tomography. In addition to peptides, the 124I-labeled antibody showed VAP-1 specific binding both in vitro and in vivo. However, the estimated human radiation dose was rather high, and thus further preclinical studies in disease models are needed to clarify the value of this imaging agent. Detection of VAP-1 on endothelium was demonstrated in these studies and this imaging approach could be used in the diagnosis of inflammatory conditions as well as melanoma. These studies provide a proof-of-concept for PET imaging of VAP-1 and further studies are warranted.
Resumo:
The extravasation of leukocytes from the blood stream into the tissues is a prerequisite for adequate immune surveillance and immune reaction. The leukocyte movement from the bloodstream into the tissues is mediated by molecular bonds. The bonds are formed between adhesion molecules on endothelial cells and their counterparts expressed on leukocytes. Vascular adhesion protein-1 (VAP-1) is an endothelial adhesion molecule mediating leukocyte interactions with endothelium. It is also an enzyme having semicarbazide sensitive amine oxidase (SSAO) activity. The SSAOactivity catalyses deamination of primary amines into corresponding aldehyde and during the enzymatic reaction hydrogen peroxide and ammonia are produced. The aim of this study was to investigate the relationship between the adhesive and enzymatic activities of VAP-1. The role of VAP-1 in leukocyte traffic was studied in vivo under normal and pathological conditions in VAP-1 deficient mice. The results from in vitro flow-based assays indicated that VAP-1 uses both SSAOactivity and its adhesive epitope to bind leukocytes, and both are perquisites for VAP-1 mediated adhesion. Furthermore, in vivo results demonstrated that leukocyte trafficking was impaired in vivo by deleting VAP-1 or inhibiting SSAO-activity. There was impairment in lymphocyte recirculation as well as leukocyte accumulation into the inflamed area. Moreover, the VAP-1 deficient mice did not show generalized defects in antimicrobial responses, whereas significant reduction in tumor progression and neovascularization was observed. These results indicate that VAP-1 could be used as a target in anti-adhesive therapies either by blocking its adhesive epitope with antibodies or by inhibiting its SSAO-activity using inhibitors. Moreover, targeting of VAP-1 may provide a new way of inhibiting neovascularization in tumors.
Resumo:
Osteoclasts are cells responsible for bone resorption. These cells undergo extensive membrane re-organization during their polarization for bone resorption and form four distinct membrane domains, namely the ruffled border, the basolateral membrane, the sealing zone and the functional secretory domain. The endocytic/biosynthetic pathway and transcytotic route(s) are important for the resorption process, since the endocytic/biosynthetic pathway brings the specific vesicles to the ruffled border whereas the transcytotic flow is believed to transport the degraded bone matrix away from the resorption lacuna to the functional secretory domain. In the present study, we found a new transcytotic route from the functional secretory domain to the ruffled border, which may compensate membrane loss from the ruffled border during the resorption process. We also found that lipid rafts are essential for the ruffled border-targeted late endosomal pathways. A small GTP-binding protein, Rab7, has earlier been shown to regulate the late steps of the endocytic pathway. In bone-resorbing osteoclasts it is involved in the formation of the ruffled border, which displays several features of late endosomal membranes. Here we discovered a new Rab7-interacting protein, Rac1, which is another small GTP-binding protein and binds to the GTP-form of Rab7 in vitro. We demonstrated further that Rab7 colocalizes with Rac1 at the fusion zone of the ruffled border in bone-resorbing osteoclasts. In other cell types, such as fibroblast-like cells, this colocalization is mainly perinuclear. Because Rac1 is known to control the actin cytoskeleton through its effectors, we suggest that the Rab7-Rac1 interaction may mediate late endosomal transport between microtubules and microfilaments, thus enabling endosomal vesicles to switch tracks from microtubules to microfilaments before their fusion to the ruffled border. We then studied the role of Rab-Rac1 interaction in the slow recycling pathway. We revealed that Rac1 also binds directly to Rab11 and to some other but not all Rab-proteins, suggesting that Rab-Rac1 interaction could be a general regulatory mechanism to direct the intracellular vesicles from microtubule mediated transport to actin filament mediated transport and vice versa. On the basis of our results we thus propose a new hypothesis for these GTPases in the regulation of intracellular membrane flow.
Resumo:
Atherosclerosis is a vascular inflammatory disease causing coronary artery disease, myocardial infarct and stroke, the leading causes of death in Finland and in many other countries. The development of atherosclerotic plaques starts already in childhood and is an ongoing process throughout life. Rupture of a plaque and the following occlusion of the vessel is the main reason for myocardial infarct and stroke, but despite extensive research, the prediction of rupture remains a major clinical problem. Inflammation is considered a key factor in the vulnerability of plaques to rupture. Measuring the inflammation in plaques non-invasively is one potential approach for identification of vulnerable plaques. The aim of this study was to evaluate tracers for positron emission tomography (PET) imaging of vascular inflammation. The studies were performed with a mouse model of atherosclerosis by using ex vivo biodistribution, autoradiography and in vivo PET and computed tomography (CT). Several tracers for inflammation activity were tested and compared with the morphology of the plaques. Inflammation in the atherosclerotic plaques was evaluated as expression of active macrophages. Systematic analysis revealed that the uptake of 18F-FDG and 11C-choline, tracers for metabolic activity in inflammatory cells, was more prominent in the atherosclerotic plaques than in the surrounding healthy vessel wall. The tracer for αvβ3 integrin, 18Fgalacto- RGD, was also found to have high potential for imaging inflammation in the plaques. While 11C-PK11195, a tracer targeted to receptors in active macrophages, was shown to accumulate in active plaques, the target-to-background ratio was not found to be ideal for in vivo imaging purposes. In conclusion, tracers for the imaging of inflammation in atherosclerotic plaques can be tested in experimental pre-clinical settings to select potential imaging agents for further clinical testing. 18F-FDG, 18F-galacto-RGD and 11C-choline choline have good properties, and further studies to clarify their applicability for atherosclerosis imaging in humans are warranted.
Resumo:
Gene therapy aims to treat diseases by introducing genetic material to the diseased tissue. For cancer treatment it is important to destroy cancerous cells; this can be achieved by introducing a gene, which induces cell death or by allowing viral vectors to replicate, which also results in destruction of cancerous cells. For cardiac diseases the approach is more like the former, except the gene produces beneficial effects, like angiogenesis. Adenoviruses have many beneficial qualities, which make the virus an interesting gene therapy vector; it can be produced relatively easily, its manipulation is quite easy and it has naturally broad tropism. By removing or replacing certain genes in the adenoviral genome, it can be made non-replicative. In this study, adenoviral receptor expression patterns were characterized in both head and neck squamous cell carcinoma and the human heart. Adenovirus serotype 5 receptor expression in head and neck cancer cell lines was found to be highly variable between cell lines and overall at lower levels, while Ad35 receptor expression was more uniform and at higher levels in all analyzed cell lines. It was also shown that a hybrid virus Ad5/35 is able to infect cells refractory to Ad5, which correlates with receptor expression in these cells. Furthermore, this difference in infection properties extends to cell killing efficiency in case of conditionally replicative viruses. Expression levels of adenoviral receptors CAR, CD46, CD86 and αv-integrins were found to be high both in normal and dilated cardiomyopathy heart tissue. The receptor levels also correlate with transduction efficiency after intracardiac injection. Ad5 showed superior transduction ability compared with Ad5/35, but evoked also a more profound immune reaction when administered this way. Adenoviral gene therapy vectors are the most used delivery vehicles in clinical trials to date. These vectors have proven to be well tolerated and positive results have been obtained when combined with traditional treatments, although poor transduction efficiency has often been reported due to low-level expression of viral receptors on target cells. In spite of this, the results are encouraging and merit for further research.
Resumo:
Studies on 68Ga-Based Agents for PET Imaging of Cancer and Inflammation Positron emission tomography (PET) is based on the use of radiolabeled agents and facilitates in vivo imaging of biological processes, such as cancer. Because the detection of cancer is demanding and is often obscured by inflammation, there is a demand for better PET imaging agents. The aim was to preliminarily evaluate new PET agents for imaging cancer and inflammation using experimental models. 68Ga-chloride and peptides, 68Ga-labeled through 1,4,7,10-tetraazacyclododecane-1,4,7,10-tetraacetic acid (DOTA), targeting matrix metalloproteinase-9 (MMP-9) were tested for tumor imaging. In addition, a 68Ga-DOTA-conjugated peptide targeting vascular adhesion protein-1 (VAP-1), was tested for inflammation imaging. The 68Ga-based imaging agents described here showed potential features by passing the essential in vitro tests, proceeding further to preclinical in vivo evaluation and being able to visualize the target. The target uptake and target-to-background ratios of 68Ga-based agents were, however, not optimal. 68Ga-chloride showed slow clearance caused by its binding to blood transferrin. In the case of 68Ga-DOTA-peptides low in vivo stability and/or low lipophilicity led to too rapid blood clearance and urinary excretion. The properties of 68Ga-labeled peptides are modifiable, as shown with matrix metalloproteinase-9 targeting ligands. In the conclusion of this PhD thesis, 68Ga-based agents for PET imaging of cancer and inflammation could be applied in the development of drugs, earlier diagnostics and following-up of the efficacy of therapies.
Resumo:
Cardiovascular mortality is 15 to 30 times higher in patients with chronic kidney disease than in the age-adjusted general population. Even minor renal dysfunction predicts cardiovascular events and death in the general population. In patients with atherosclerotic renovascular disease the annual cardiovascular event and death rate is even higher. The abnormalities in coronary and peripheral artery function in the different stages of chronic kidney disease and in renovascular disease are still poorly understood, nor have the cardiac effects of renal artery revascularization been well characterized, although considered to be beneficial. This study was conducted to characterize myocardial perfusion and peripheral endothelial function in patients with chronic kidney disease and in patients with atherosclerotic renovascular disease. Myocardial perfusion was measured with positron emission tomography (PET) and peripheral endothelial function with brachial artery flow-mediated dilatation. It has been suggested that the poor renal outcomes after the renal artery revascularization could be due to damage in the stenotic kidney parenchyma; especially the reduction in the microvascular density, changes mainly evident at the cortical level which controls almost 80% of the total renal blood flow. This study was also performed to measure the effect of renal artery stenosis revascularization on renal perfusion in patients with renovascular disease. In order to do that a PET-based method for quantification of renal perfusion was developed. The coronary flow reserve of patients with chronic kidney disease was similar to the coronary flow reserve of healthy controls. In renovascular disease the coronary flow reserve was, however, markedly reduced. Flow-mediated dilatation of brachial artery was decreased in patients with chronic kidney disease compared to healthy controls, and even more so in patients with renovascular disease. After renal artery stenosis revascularization, coronary vascular function and renal perfusion did not improve in patients with atherosclerotic renovascular disease, but in patients with bilateral renal artery stenosis, flow-mediated dilatation improved. Chronic kidney disease does not significantly affect coronary vascular function. On the contrary, coronary vascular function was severely deteriorated in patients with atherosclerotic renovascular disease, possibly because of diffuse coronary artery disease and/or diffuse microvascular disease. The peripheral endothelial function was disturbed in patients with chronic kidney disease and even more so in patient with atherosclerotic renovascular disease. Renal artery stenosis dilatation does not seem to offer any benefits over medical treatment in patients with renovascular disease, since revascularization does not improve coronary vascular function or renal perfusion.
Resumo:
Aim and design: To evaluate an oral health program directed to expecting families and their children. The intervention was carried out in one of the four health care areas of the city of Turku. Another area acted as a control. Subjects and methods: Children (n = 1217), born between January 1, 1998 and June 30, 1999, in the respective health care areas were screened for mutans streptococci bacteria (MS), and their caretakers were interviewed when the child was 18 months old. MScolonization was used as the child’s risk indicator. Intensified health education and the use of xylitol lozenges targeted at the children at risk were the main elements of the program. Controls and the non-MS-colonized children received routine prevention –examination and education at the ages of three and five years. Altogether 794 subjects were followed for 42 months after receiving consent from their caretakers. Associations of oral-health-related factors with MS colonization and caries increment were studied inside the control group. Results: MS colonization associated with the occupation of the caretaker and ethnicity. The program was effective in white-collar families; prevented fraction being 67 %. In blue-collar families no effect was achieved. At the age of five years, caries increment was strongly related to the occupation of the caretaker, MS at 18 months, child’s sugar use, night feeding, use of thirst quencher at the age of 18 months, and father’s reported oral health. Conclusions: Programs targeted at MS-colonized children can reduce caries in whitecollar families. A program mainly based on activity at home seems to favor white-collar families, whereas different kind of support is needed for the blue-collar families.
Resumo:
Background: Metabolic syndrome (MetS) is a combination of several cardio-metabolic risk factors including obesity, hyperglycemia, hypertension and dyslipidemia. MetS has been associated with increased levels of apolipoprotein B (apoB) and low-density lipoprotein oxidation (OxLDL) and with an increased risk of cardiovascular disease and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease. Aims: To establish the relation of apoB and OxLDL with the MetS development and to determine the status of MetS as a risk factor for adverse liver changes and for subclinical atherosclerosis. Subjects and Methods: The present thesis is part of the two large scale population-based, prospective, observational studies. Cardiovascular Risk in Young Finns study was launched in 1980 including 3,596 subjects aged 3-18 years. Thereafter follow-up studies have been conducted regularly. In the latest follow-ups that were performed in 2001 (N=2,283) and 2007 (N=2,204), non-invasive ultrasound studies were introduced to the study protocol to measure subclinical atherosclerosis i.e. carotid intima-media thickness (IMT), carotid artery distensibility (Cdist) and brachial flow-mediated dilatation (FMD). Alanine-aminotransferase (ALT) and gammaglutamyltransferase (GGT) were measured in 2007 to assess liver function. The Bogalusa Heart Study is a long-term epidemiologic study of cardiovascular risk factors launched in 1972 in a biracial community of Bogalusa, Louisiana, USA. Total of 374 youths (aged 9-18 years at baseline in 1984-88) who underwent non-invasive ultrasound studies of the carotid artery as adults, were included in the analyses of the present thesis. Results: The odds ratios (95% confidence intervals) for MetS incidence during a 6-year follow-up by quartiles of apoB were 2.0(1.0-3.8) for the second quartile, 3.1(1.7-5.7) for the third quartile and 4.2(2.3-7.6) for the fourth quartile. OxLDL was not independently associated with incident MetS. Youth (aged 9-18 years) with MetS or with high body mass index were at 2-3 times the risk of having MetS, high IMT, and type 2 diabetes 24-years later as adults. IMT increased 79±7μm (mean±SEM) in subjects with MetS and 42±2μm in subjects without the MetS (P<0.0001) during 6- years. Subjects who lost the MetS diagnosis during 6-year follow-up had reduced IMT progression compared to persistent MetS group (0.036±0.005vs.0.079±0.010 mm, P=0.001) and reduced Cdist change compared to incident MetS group (-0.12±0.05vs.-0.38±0.10 %/mmHg, P=0.03) over 6-year follow-up. MetS predicted elevated ALT (β±SEM=0.380±0.052, P<0.0001 in men and 0.160±0.052, P=0.002 in women) and GGT (β±SEM=0.240±0.058, P<0.0001 in men and 0.262±0.053, P<0.0001 in women) levels after 6-years. Conclusions: These findings suggest that apoB may give additional information on early metabolic disturbances predisposing MetS. MetS may be used to identify individuals at increased risk of developing atherosclerosis and non-alcoholic liver disease. However, recovery from the MetS may have positive effects on liver and vascular properties.
Resumo:
Breast cancer that has metastasized to bone is currently an incurable disease, causing significant morbidity and mortality. The aim of this thesis work was to elucidate molecular mechanisms of bone metastasis and thereby gain insights into novel therapeutic approaches. First, we found that L‐serine biosynthesis genes, phosphoglycerate dehydrogenase (PHGDH), phosphoserine aminotransferase 1 (PSAT1) and phosphoserine phosphatase (PSPH), were up‐regulated in highly bone metastatic MDA‐MB‐231(SA) cells as compared with the parental breast cancer cell line. Knockdown of serine biosynthesis inhibited proliferation of MDA‐MB‐231(SA) cells, and L‐serine was essential for the formation of bone resorbing osteoclasts. Clinical data demonstrated that high expression of PHGDH and PSAT1 was associated with decreased relapse‐free and overall survival and with features typical of poor outcome in breast cancer. Second, RNA interference screening pointed out heparan sulfate 6‐O‐sulfotransferase 2 (HS6ST2) as a critical gene for transforming growth factor β (TGF‐β)‐induced interleukin 11 (IL‐11) production in MDA‐MB‐231(SA) cells. Exogenous heparan sulfate glycosaminoglycans heparin and K5‐NSOS also inhibited TGF‐β‐induced IL‐11 production in MDA‐MB‐231(SA) cells. Furthermore, K5‐NSOS decreased osteolytic lesion area and tumor burden in bone in mice. Third, we discovered that the microRNAs miR‐204, ‐211 and ‐379 inhibited IL‐11 expression in MDA‐MB‐231(SA) cells through direct targeting of the IL‐11 mRNA. MiR‐379 also inhibited Smad‐mediated signaling. Gene expression profiling of miR‐204 and ‐379 transfected cells indicated that these microRNAs down‐regulate several bone metastasis‐relevant genes, including prostaglandin‐endoperoxide synthase 2 (PTGS2). Taken together, this study identified three potential treatment strategies for bone metastatic breast cancer: inhibition of serine biosynthesis, heparan sulfate glycosaminoglycans and restoration of miR‐204/‐211/‐379.
Resumo:
Alpha2-Adrenoceptors are cell-surface G protein coupled receptors that mediate many of the effects of the catecholamines noradrenaline and adrenaline. The three human α2-adrenoceptor subtypes are widely expressed in different tissues and organs, and they mediate many different physiological and pharmacological effects in the central and peripheral nervous system and as postsynaptic receptors in target organs. Previous studies have demonstrated that α2-adrenoceptors mediate both vascular constriction and dilatation in humans. Large inter-individual variation has been observed in the vascular responses to α2-adrenoceptor activation in clinical studies. All three receptor subtypes are potential drug targets. It was therefore considered important to further elucidate the details of adrenergic vascular regulation and its genetic variation, since such knowledge may help to improve the development of future cardiovascular drugs and intensive care therapies. Dexmedetomidine is the most selective and potent α2-adrenoceptor agonist currently available for clinical use. When given systemically, dexmedetomidine induces nearly complete sympatholysis already at low concentrations, and postsynaptic effects, such vasoconstriction, can be observed with increasing concentrations. Thus, local infusions of small doses of dexmedetomidine into dorsal hand veins and the application of pharmacological sympathectomy with brachial plexus block provide a means to assess drug-induced peripheral vascular responses without interference from systemic pharmacological effects and autonomic nervous system regulation. Dexmedetomidine was observed to have biphasic effects on haemodynamics, with an initial decrease in blood pressure at low concentrations followed by substantial increases in blood pressure and coronary vascular resistance at high concentrations. Plasma concentrations of dexmedetomidine that significantly exceeded the recommended therapeutic level did not reduce myocardial blood flow below the level that is observed with the usual therapeutic concentrations and did not induce any evident myocardial ischaemia in healthy subjects. Further, it was demonstrated that dexmedetomidine also had significant vasodilatory effects through activation of endothelial nitric oxide synthesis, and thus when the endothelial component of the blood vessel response to dexmedetomidine was inhibited, peripheral vasoconstriction was augmented. Hand vein constriction responses to α2-adrenoceptor activation by dexmedetomidine were only weakly associated with the constriction responses to α1-adrenoceptor activation, pointing to independent cellular regulation by these two adrenoceptor classes. Substantial inter-individual variation was noted in the venous constriction elicited by activation of α2-adrenoceptors by dexmedetomidine. In two study populations from two different continents, a single nucleotide polymorphism in the PRKCB gene was found to be associated with the dorsal hand vein constriction response to dexmedetomidine, suggesting that protein kinase C beta may have an important role in the vascular α2-adrenoceptor signalling pathways activated by dexmedetomidine.
Resumo:
It is crucial that lymphocytes patrol the body against foreign intruders and that leukocytes invade inflamed tissues to ameliorate the infection or injury. The adhesion molecules in leukocytes and endothelial cells play an essential role in the immune response by directing the traffic of leukocytes. However, the same molecules that guide leukocyte traffic under physiological conditions are also involved in pathological situations, when an overly excessive or harmful inflammatory response leads to tissue destruction and organ dysfunction or tumor growth. Vascular adhesion protein-1 (VAP-1) and Common lymphatic endothelial and vascular endothelial receptor-1 (CLEVER-1) are endothelial molecules that participate in the adhesion of leukocytes to the endothelia. This study was designed to elucidate, using different inflammation models, the role of VAP-1 and CLEVER-1 in leukocyte migration to the inflamed tissue, and to evaluate the use of antibodies against these molecules as an anti-adhesive therapy. Also, the role of CLEVER-1 during tumorigenesis was studied. Blocking the function of VAP-1 with antibodies significantly decreased the accumulation of leukocytes in the inflamed tissue. Targeting CLEVER-1 prevented cell migration via lymphatic vessels, as well as leukocyte traffic during inflammation. Following the anti-CLEVER-1 antibody treatment the number of immune regulating leukocytes in tumors was reduced, which led to a decrease in tumor growth. However, the normal immune response towards immunization or bacterial infection was not compromised. Thus, VAP-1 and CLEVER-1 are both potential targets for antiinflammatory therapies for preventing the harmful accumulation of leukocytes in inflamed areas. Targeting CLEVER-1 may also inhibit tumor growth by reducing immunosuppressive leukocytes in tumors