Publication | Open Access
Angiopoietin-1 is essential in mouse vasculature during development and in response to injury
437
Citations
36
References
2011
Year
InflammationMechanobiologyBlood Vessel DevelopmentDevelopmental BiologyAngiogenesisVascular AdaptationImmunologyEndothelial DysfunctionFibroblast Growth FactorVascular BiologyCell BiologyNeovascularizationMouse VasculatureMedicineCell TransplantationCell SignalingConventional KnockoutAngiopoietin-1/tek Signaling
Angiopoietin-1/Tek signaling is a critical regulator of blood vessel development, with conventional knockout of angiopoietin-1 or Tek in mice being embryonically lethal due to vascular defects. In addition, angiopoietin-1 is thought to be required for the stability of mature vessels. Using a Cre-Lox conditional gene targeting approach, we have studied the role of angiopoietin-1 in embryonic and adult vasculature. We report here that angiopoietin-1 is critical for regulating both the number and diameter of developing vessels but is not required for pericyte recruitment. Cardiac-specific knockout of angiopoietin-1 reproduced the phenotype of the conventional knockout, demonstrating that the early vascular abnormalities arise from flow-dependent defects. Strikingly, deletion in the entire embryo after day E13.5 produced no immediate vascular phenotype. However, when combined with injury or microvascular stress, angiopoietin-1 deficiency resulted in profound organ damage, accelerated angiogenesis, and fibrosis. These findings redefine our understanding of the biological roles of angiopoietin-1: it is dispensable in quiescent vessels but has a powerful ability to modulate the vascular response after injury.
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