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Adaptable haemodynamic endothelial cells for organogenesis and tumorigenesis

Authors :
Ying Liu
Shahin Rafii
Alfonso M Tedeschi
Fuqiang Geng
Yang Lin
Jason R. Spence
Brisa Palikuqi
Jenny Xiang
Sina Y. Rabbany
Lukas E. Dow
Balvir Kunar
Federico Scottoni
Tuo Zhang
Alessandro Filippo Pellegata
Olivier Elemento
Paolo De Coppi
Jesus M. Gomez-Salinero
Mavee Witherspoon
Qiao Zhou
Duc-Huy T. Nguyen
Paul Zumbo
Steven M. Lipkin
Masataka Yokoyama
Ge Li
Koji Shido
Ryan Schreiner
Robert E. Schwartz
Teng Han
David Redmond
Source :
Nature
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2020.

Abstract

Endothelial cells adopt tissue-specific characteristics to instruct organ development and regeneration1,2. This adaptability is lost in cultured adult endothelial cells, which do not vascularize tissues in an organotypic manner. Here, we show that transient reactivation of the embryonic-restricted ETS variant transcription factor 2 (ETV2)3 in mature human endothelial cells cultured in a serum-free three-dimensional matrix composed of a mixture of laminin, entactin and type-IV collagen (LEC matrix) ‘resets’ these endothelial cells to adaptable, vasculogenic cells, which form perfusable and plastic vascular plexi. Through chromatin remodelling, ETV2 induces tubulogenic pathways, including the activation of RAP1, which promotes the formation of durable lumens4,5. In three-dimensional matrices—which do not have the constraints of bioprinted scaffolds—the ‘reset’ vascular endothelial cells (R-VECs) self-assemble into stable, multilayered and branching vascular networks within scalable microfluidic chambers, which are capable of transporting human blood. In vivo, R-VECs implanted subcutaneously in mice self-organize into durable pericyte-coated vessels that functionally anastomose to the host circulation and exhibit long-lasting patterning, with no evidence of malformations or angiomas. R-VECs directly interact with cells within three-dimensional co-cultured organoids, removing the need for the restrictive synthetic semipermeable membranes that are required for organ-on-chip systems, therefore providing a physiological platform for vascularization, which we call ‘Organ-On-VascularNet’. R-VECs enable perfusion of glucose-responsive insulin-secreting human pancreatic islets, vascularize decellularized rat intestines and arborize healthy or cancerous human colon organoids. Using single-cell RNA sequencing and epigenetic profiling, we demonstrate that R-VECs establish an adaptive vascular niche that differentially adjusts and conforms to organoids and tumoroids in a tissue-specific manner. Our Organ-On-VascularNet model will permit metabolic, immunological and physiochemical studies and screens to decipher the crosstalk between organotypic endothelial cells and parenchymal cells for identification of determinants of endothelial cell heterogeneity, and could lead to advances in therapeutic organ repair and tumour targeting.<br />The transient reactivation of ETV2 in adult human endothelial cells reprograms these cells to become adaptable vasculogenic endothelia that in three-dimensional matrices self-assemble into vascular networks that can transport blood and physiologically arborize organoids and decellularized tissues.

Details

ISSN :
14764687 and 00280836
Volume :
585
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9cbb4783c9b04c2ad75217d3dce9913a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-020-2712-z