[HTML][HTML] Endothelium-derived fibronectin regulates neonatal vascular morphogenesis in an autocrine fashion

CJ Turner, K Badu-Nkansah, RO Hynes - Angiogenesis, 2017 - Springer
CJ Turner, K Badu-Nkansah, RO Hynes
Angiogenesis, 2017Springer
Fibronectin containing alternatively spliced EIIIA and EIIIB domains is largely absent from
mature quiescent vessels in adults, but is highly expressed around blood vessels during
developmental and pathological angiogenesis. The precise functions of fibronectin and its
splice variants during developmental angiogenesis however remain unclear due to the
presence of cardiac, somitic, mesodermal and neural defects in existing global fibronectin
KO mouse models. Using a rare family of surviving EIIIA EIIIB double KO mice, as well as …
Abstract
Fibronectin containing alternatively spliced EIIIA and EIIIB domains is largely absent from mature quiescent vessels in adults, but is highly expressed around blood vessels during developmental and pathological angiogenesis. The precise functions of fibronectin and its splice variants during developmental angiogenesis however remain unclear due to the presence of cardiac, somitic, mesodermal and neural defects in existing global fibronectin KO mouse models. Using a rare family of surviving EIIIA EIIIB double KO mice, as well as inducible endothelial-specific fibronectin-deficient mutant mice, we show that vascular development in the neonatal retina is regulated in an autocrine manner by endothelium-derived fibronectin, and requires both EIIIA and EIIIB domains and the RGD-binding α5 and αv integrins for its function. Exogenous sources of fibronectin do not fully substitute for the autocrine function of endothelial fibronectin, demonstrating that fibronectins from different sources contribute differentially to specific aspects of angiogenesis.
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