Christina N. Como , Cesar Cervantes , Brad Pawlikowski , Julie Siegenthaler
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The development of the retinal vasculature is essential to maintain health of the tissue, but the developmental mechanisms are not completely understood. The aim of this study was to investigate the cell-autonomous role of retinoic acid signaling in endothelial cells during retina vascular development. Using a temporal and cell-specific mouse model to disrupt retinoic acid signaling in endothelial cells in the postnatal retina (Pdgfbicre/+dnRAR403fl/fl mutants), we discovered that angiogenesis in the retina is significantly decreased with a reduction in retina vascularization, endothelial tip cell number and filipodia, and endothelial ‘crowding’ of stalk cells. Interestingly, by P15, the vasculature can overcome the early angiogenic defect and fully vascularized the retina. At P60, the vasculature is intact with no evidence of retina cell death or altered blood retinal barrier integrity. Further, we identified that the angiogenic defect seen in mutants at P6 correlates with decreased Vegfr3 expression in endothelial cells. Collectively, our work identified a previously unappreciated function for endothelial retinoic acid signaling in early retinal angiogenesis.
期刊介绍:
Differentiation is a multidisciplinary journal dealing with topics relating to cell differentiation, development, cellular structure and function, and cancer. Differentiation of eukaryotes at the molecular level and the use of transgenic and targeted mutagenesis approaches to problems of differentiation are of particular interest to the journal.
The journal will publish full-length articles containing original work in any of these areas. We will also publish reviews and commentaries on topics of current interest.
The principal subject areas the journal covers are: • embryonic patterning and organogenesis
• human development and congenital malformation
• mechanisms of cell lineage commitment
• tissue homeostasis and oncogenic transformation
• establishment of cellular polarity
• stem cell differentiation
• cell reprogramming mechanisms
• stability of the differentiated state
• cell and tissue interactions in vivo and in vitro
• signal transduction pathways in development and differentiation
• carcinogenesis and cancer
• mechanisms involved in cell growth and division especially relating to cancer
• differentiation in regeneration and ageing
• therapeutic applications of differentiation processes.