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Publication : LPA4 regulates blood and lymphatic vessel formation during mouse embryogenesis.

First Author  Sumida H Year  2010
Journal  Blood Volume  116
Issue  23 Pages  5060-70
PubMed ID  20713964 Mgi Jnum  J:167262
Mgi Id  MGI:4867618 Doi  10.1182/blood-2010-03-272443
Citation  Sumida H, et al. (2010) LPA4 regulates blood and lymphatic vessel formation during mouse embryogenesis. Blood 116(23):5060-70
abstractText  Lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) is a potent lipid mediator with a wide variety of biological actions mediated through G protein-coupled receptors (LPA(1-6)). LPA(4) has been identified as a G(13) protein-coupled receptor, but its physiological role is unknown. Here we show that a subset of LPA(4)-deficient embryos did not survive gestation and displayed hemorrhages and/or edema in many organs at multiple embryonic stages. The blood vessels of bleeding LPA(4)-deficient embryos were often dilated. The recruitment of mural cells, namely smooth muscle cells and pericytes, was impaired. Consistently, Matrigel plug assays showed decreased mural cell coverage of endothelial cells in the neovessels of LPA(4)-deficient adult mice. In situ hybridization detected Lpa4 mRNA in the endothelium of some vasculatures. Similarly, the lymphatic vessels of edematous embryos were dilated. These results suggest that LPA(4) regulates establishment of the structure and function of blood and lymphatic vessels during mouse embryogenesis. Considering the critical role of autotaxin (an enzyme involved in LPA production) and Galpha(13) in vascular development, we suggest that LPA(4) provides a link between these 2 molecules.
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