Publication | Open Access
Endothelial Cell Tube Formation Assay for the <em>In Vitro</em> Study of Angiogenesis
335
Citations
5
References
2014
Year
Endothelial CellsCytoskeletonBiomedical EngineeringCellular PhysiologyTissue DevelopmentAngiogenesisMatrix BiologyCapillary NetworkEndothelial Cell PathobiologyVascular ImageVascular BiologyVitro AngiogenesisNeovascularizationVascular Endothelial Growth FactorCell BiologyDevelopmental BiologyEndothelial DysfunctionCell-matrix InteractionWound HealingMedicineExtracellular Matrix
Angiogenesis is a vital process for normal tissue development and wound healing, but is also associated with a variety of pathological conditions. Using this protocol, angiogenesis may be measured in vitro in a fast, quantifiable manner. Primary or immortalized endothelial cells are mixed with conditioned media and plated on basement membrane matrix. The endothelial cells form capillary like structures in response to angiogenic signals found in conditioned media. The tube formation occurs quickly with endothelial cells beginning to align themselves within 1 hr and lumen-containing tubules beginning to appear within 2 hr. Tubes can be visualized using a phase contrast inverted microscope, or the cells can be treated with calcein AM prior to the assay and tubes visualized through fluorescence or confocal microscopy. The number of branch sites/nodes, loops/meshes, or number or length of tubes formed can be easily quantified as a measure of in vitro angiogenesis. In summary, this assay can be used to identify genes and pathways that are involved in the promotion or inhibition of angiogenesis in a rapid, reproducible, and quantitative manner.
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