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Publication : Excess vascular endothelial growth factor-A disrupts pericyte recruitment during blood vessel formation.

First Author  Darden J Year  2019
Journal  Angiogenesis Volume  22
Issue  1 Pages  167-183
PubMed ID  30238211 Mgi Jnum  J:287163
Mgi Id  MGI:6407673 Doi  10.1007/s10456-018-9648-z
Citation  Darden J, et al. (2019) Excess vascular endothelial growth factor-A disrupts pericyte recruitment during blood vessel formation. Angiogenesis 22(1):167-183
abstractText  Pericyte investment into new blood vessels is essential for vascular development such that mis-regulation within this phase of vessel formation can contribute to numerous pathologies including arteriovenous and cerebrovascular malformations. It is critical therefore to illuminate how angiogenic signaling pathways intersect to regulate pericyte migration and investment. Here, we disrupted vascular endothelial growth factor-A (VEGF-A) signaling in ex vivo and in vitro models of sprouting angiogenesis, and found pericyte coverage to be compromised during VEGF-A perturbations. Pericytes had little to no expression of VEGF receptors, suggesting VEGF-A signaling defects affect endothelial cells directly but pericytes indirectly. Live imaging of ex vivo angiogenesis in mouse embryonic skin revealed limited pericyte migration during exposure to exogenous VEGF-A. During VEGF-A gain-of-function conditions, pericytes and endothelial cells displayed abnormal transcriptional changes within the platelet-derived growth factor-B (PDGF-B) and Notch pathways. To further test potential crosstalk between these pathways in pericytes, we stimulated embryonic pericytes with Notch ligands Delta-like 4 (Dll4) and Jagged-1 (Jag1) and found induction of Notch pathway activity but no changes in PDGF Receptor-beta (Pdgfrbeta) expression. In contrast, PDGFRbeta protein levels decreased with mis-regulated VEGF-A activity, observed in the effects on full-length PDGFRbeta and a truncated PDGFRbeta isoform generated by proteolytic cleavage or potentially by mRNA splicing. Overall, these observations support a model in which, during the initial stages of vascular development, pericyte distribution and coverage are indirectly affected by endothelial cell VEGF-A signaling and the downstream regulation of PDGF-B-PDGFRbeta dynamics, without substantial involvement of pericyte Notch signaling during these early stages.
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