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Publication : Vascular permeability and pathological angiogenesis in caveolin-1-null mice.

First Author  Chang SH Year  2009
Journal  Am J Pathol Volume  175
Issue  4 Pages  1768-76
PubMed ID  19729487 Mgi Jnum  J:153053
Mgi Id  MGI:4360810 Doi  10.2353/ajpath.2009.090171
Citation  Chang SH, et al. (2009) Vascular permeability and pathological angiogenesis in caveolin-1-null mice. Am J Pathol 175(4):1768-76
abstractText  Caveolin-1, the signature protein of endothelial cell caveolae, has many important functions in vascular cells. Caveolae are thought to be the transcellular pathway by which plasma proteins cross normal capillary endothelium, but, unexpectedly, cav-1(-/-) mice, which lack caveolae, have increased permeability to plasma albumin. The acute increase in vascular permeability induced by agents such as vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF)-A occurs through venules, not capillaries, and particularly through the vesiculo-vacuolar organelle (VVO), a unique structure composed of numerous interconnecting vesicles and vacuoles that together span the venular endothelium from lumen to ablumen. Furthermore, the hyperpermeable blood vessels found in pathological angiogenesis, mother vessels, are derived from venules. The present experiments made use of cav-1(-/-) mice to investigate the relationship between caveolae and VVOs and the roles of caveolin-1 in VVO structure in the acute vascular hyperpermeability induced by VEGF-A and in pathological angiogenesis and associated chronic vascular hyperpermeability. We found that VVOs expressed caveolin-1 variably but, in contrast to caveolae, were present in normal numbers and with apparently unaltered structure in cav-1(-/-) mice. Nonetheless, VEGF-A-induced hyperpermeability was strikingly reduced in cav-1(-/-) mice, as was pathological angiogenesis and associated chronic vascular hyperpermeability, whether induced by VEGF-A(164) or by a tumor. Thus, caveolin-1 is not necessary for VVO structure but may have important roles in regulating VVO function in acute vascular hyperpermeability and angiogenesis.
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