VE-PTP regulates VEGFR2 activity in stalk cells to establish endothelial cell polarity and lumen formation

Makoto Hayashi, Årindam Majumdar(Karolinska Institutet), Xiujuan Li(Uppsala University), Jeremy Adler(Uppsala University), Zuyue Sun(Uppsala University), Simona Vertuani(Karolinska Institutet), Carina Hellberg(University of Birmingham), Sofie Mellberg(Uppsala University), Sina Koch(Uppsala University), Anna Dimberg(Uppsala University), Gou Young Koh(Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology), Elisabetta Dejana(FIRC Institute of Molecular Oncology), Heinz‐Georg Belting(University of Basel), Markus Affolter(University of Basel), Gavin Thurston(Regeneron (United States)), Lars Holmgren(Karolinska Institutet), Dietmar Vestweber(Max Planck Institute for Molecular Biomedicine), Lena Claesson‐Welsh(Uppsala University)
Nature Communications
April 9, 2013
Cited by 144Open Access
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Abstract

Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) guides the path of new vessel sprouts by inducing VEGF receptor-2 activity in the sprout tip. In the stalk cells of the sprout, VEGF receptor-2 activity is downregulated. Here, we show that VEGF receptor-2 in stalk cells is dephosphorylated by the endothelium-specific vascular endothelial-phosphotyrosine phosphatase (VE-PTP). VE-PTP acts on VEGF receptor-2 located in endothelial junctions indirectly, via the Angiopoietin-1 receptor Tie2. VE-PTP inactivation in mouse embryoid bodies leads to excess VEGF receptor-2 activity in stalk cells, increased tyrosine phosphorylation of VE-cadherin and loss of cell polarity and lumen formation. Vessels in ve-ptp−/− teratomas also show increased VEGF receptor-2 activity and loss of endothelial polarization. Moreover, the zebrafish VE-PTP orthologue ptp-rb is essential for polarization and lumen formation in intersomitic vessels. We conclude that the role of Tie2 in maintenance of vascular quiescence involves VE-PTP-dependent dephosphorylation of VEGF receptor-2, and that VEGF receptor-2 activity regulates VE-cadherin tyrosine phosphorylation, endothelial cell polarity and lumen formation. Vascular endothelial growth factor is implicated in blood vessel development. In zebrafish, Hayashi et al. find that blood vessel development is dependent on the suppression of vascular endothelial growth factor by the phosphatase VE-PTP, which is recruited by activation of the angiopoietin receptor Tie2.


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