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Angiogenesis depends upon EPHB4-mediated export of collagen IV from vascular endothelial cells
Di Chen, Elizabeth D. Hughes, Thomas L. Saunders, Jiangping Wu, Magda N. Hernandez Vasquez, Taija Makinen, Philip D. King
Di Chen, Elizabeth D. Hughes, Thomas L. Saunders, Jiangping Wu, Magda N. Hernandez Vasquez, Taija Makinen, Philip D. King
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Research Article Angiogenesis Vascular biology

Angiogenesis depends upon EPHB4-mediated export of collagen IV from vascular endothelial cells

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Abstract

Capillary malformation-arteriovenous malformation (CM-AVM) is a blood vascular anomaly caused by inherited loss-of-function mutations in RASA1 or EPHB4 genes, which encode p120 Ras GTPase-activating protein (p120 RasGAP/RASA1) and Ephrin receptor B4 (EPHB4). However, whether RASA1 and EPHB4 function in the same molecular signaling pathway to regulate the blood vasculature is uncertain. Here, we show that induced endothelial cell–specific (EC-specific) disruption of Ephb4 in mice resulted in accumulation of collagen IV in the EC ER, leading to EC apoptotic death and defective developmental, neonatal, and pathological angiogenesis, as reported previously in induced EC-specific RASA1-deficient mice. Moreover, defects in angiogenic responses in EPHB4-deficient mice could be rescued by drugs that inhibit signaling through the Ras pathway and drugs that promote collagen IV export from the ER. However, EPHB4-mutant mice that expressed a form of EPHB4 that is unable to physically engage RASA1 but retains protein tyrosine kinase activity showed normal angiogenic responses. These findings provide strong evidence that RASA1 and EPHB4 function in the same signaling pathway to protect against the development of CM-AVM independent of physical interaction and have important implications for possible means of treatment of this disease.

Authors

Di Chen, Elizabeth D. Hughes, Thomas L. Saunders, Jiangping Wu, Magda N. Hernandez Vasquez, Taija Makinen, Philip D. King

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Figure 2

Collagen IV accumulation in ECs of induced EPHB4-deficient embryos.

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Collagen IV accumulation in ECs of induced EPHB4-deficient embryos.
TM w...
TM was administered to Ephb4fl/fl Ubert2cre, Ephb4fl/fl Cdh5ert2cre, and corresponding littermate Ephb4fl/fl embryos at E13.5. (A and C) Embryos were harvested at E18.5 and skin sections were stained with anti-CD31 and anti–collagen IV antibodies and Hoechst. Note intracellular accumulation of collagen IV in ECs of Ephb4fl/fl Ubert2cre embryos (A) and Ephb4fl/fl Cdh5ert2cre embryos (C) (examples highlighted with arrowheads) and relative paucity of collagen IV in basement membranes (asterisks). E, erythrocyte. (B and D) Plots show the percentage of EC with intracellular collagen IV puncta in individual CD31+ BV in skin of embryos selected from multiple randomly chosen areas. Bars show the mean ± 1 SEM of percentage EC with collagen IV accumulation (B, Ephb4fl/fl, n = 13; Ephb4fl/fl Ubert2cre, n = 20), (C, Ephb4fl/fl, n = 13; Ephb4fl/fl Cdh5ert2cre, n = 20). ****, P < 0.0001; Mann-Whitney test.

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