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Neuronal sFlt1 and Vegfaa determine venous sprouting and spinal cord vascularization

Authors :
Wild, Raphael
Klems, Alina
Takamiya, Masanari
Hayashi, Yuya
Strähle, Uwe
Ando, Koji
Mochizuki, Naoki
van Impel, Andreas
Schulte-Merker, Stefan
Krueger, Janna
Preau, Laetitia
le Noble, Ferdinand
Source :
Nature Communications, Vol 8, Iss 1, Pp 1-17 (2017), Nature Communications, Nature Communications, 8, 13991, Wild, R, Klems, A, Takamiya, M, Hayashi, Y, Strähle, U, Ando, K, Mochizuki, N, van Impel, A, Schulte-Merker, S, Krueger, J, Preau, L & le Noble, F 2017, ' Neuronal sFlt1 and Vegfaa determine venous sprouting and spinal cord vascularization ', Nature Communications, vol. 8, 13991 . https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms13991
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Nature Portfolio, 2017.

Abstract

Formation of organ-specific vasculatures requires cross-talk between developing tissue and specialized endothelial cells. Here we show how developing zebrafish spinal cord neurons coordinate vessel growth through balancing of neuron-derived Vegfaa, with neuronal sFlt1 restricting Vegfaa-Kdrl mediated angiogenesis at the neurovascular interface. Neuron-specific loss of flt1 or increased neuronal vegfaa expression promotes angiogenesis and peri-neural tube vascular network formation. Combining loss of neuronal flt1 with gain of vegfaa promotes sprout invasion into the neural tube. On loss of neuronal flt1, ectopic sprouts emanate from veins involving special angiogenic cell behaviours including nuclear positioning and a molecular signature distinct from primary arterial or secondary venous sprouting. Manipulation of arteriovenous identity or Notch signalling established that ectopic sprouting in flt1 mutants requires venous endothelium. Conceptually, our data suggest that spinal cord vascularization proceeds from veins involving two-tiered regulation of neuronal sFlt1 and Vegfaa via a novel sprouting mode.<br />The generation of vasculature in organs is regulated by cross-talk between the developing tissue and specialized endothelial cells. Here, the authors show that vessel growth feeding the zebrafish spinal cord is coordinated by balancing neuron-derived pro-angiogenic ligand Vegfaa and its receptor, sFlt1.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
8
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c2af263bc840b0bb3a2e5348cb0b5141
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms13991