Coronary endothelial proliferation and morphogenesis are regulated by a VEGF‐mediated pathway

Tresa Nesbitt(University of South Carolina), Andrea Roberts(University of South Carolina), Hong Tan(University of South Carolina), Lorain Junor(University of South Carolina), Michael J. Yost(University of South Carolina), Jay D. Potts(University of South Carolina), Robert W. Dettman(Northwestern University), Richard L. Goodwin(University of South Carolina)
Developmental Dynamics
January 22, 2009
Cited by 17Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Though development of the coronary vasculature is a critical event during embryogenesis, the molecular mechanisms that regulate its formation are not well characterized. Two unique approaches were used to investigate interactions between cardiac myocytes and proepicardial (PE) cells, which are the coronary anlagen. One of these experimental approaches used a 3-D collagen scaffold system on which specific cell-cell and cell-matrix interactions were studied. The other approach used a whole heart culture system that allowed for the analysis of epicardial to mesenchymal transformation (EMT). The VEGF signaling system has been implicated previously as an important regulator of coronary development. Our results demonstrated that a specific isoform of VEGF-A, VEGF(164), increased PE-derived endothelial cell proliferation and also increased EMT. However, VEGF-stimulated endothelial cells did not robustly coalesce into endothelial tubes as they did when cocultured with cardiac myocytes. Interestingly, blocking VEGF signaling via flk-1 inhibition reduced endothelial tube formation despite the presence of cardiac myocytes. These results indicate that VEGF signaling is complex during coronary development and that combinatorial signaling by other VEGF-A isoforms or other flk-1-binding VEGFs are likely to regulate endothelial tube formation.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis