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Rapamycin reversal of VEGF-C–driven lymphatic anomalies in the respiratory tract
Peter Baluk, Li-Chin Yao, Julio C. Flores, Dongwon Choi, Young-Kwon Hong, Donald M. McDonald
Peter Baluk, Li-Chin Yao, Julio C. Flores, Dongwon Choi, Young-Kwon Hong, Donald M. McDonald
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Research Article Vascular biology

Rapamycin reversal of VEGF-C–driven lymphatic anomalies in the respiratory tract

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Abstract

Lymphatic malformations are serious but poorly understood conditions that present therapeutic challenges. The goal of this study was to compare strategies for inducing regression of abnormal lymphatics and explore underlying mechanisms. CCSP-rtTA/tetO-VEGF-C mice, in which doxycycline regulates VEGF-C expression in the airway epithelium, were used as a model of pulmonary lymphangiectasia. After doxycycline was stopped, VEGF-C expression returned to normal, but lymphangiectasia persisted for at least 9 months. Inhibition of VEGFR-2/VEGFR-3 signaling, Notch, β-adrenergic receptors, or autophagy and antiinflammatory steroids had no noticeable effect on the amount or severity of lymphangiectasia. However, rapamycin inhibition of mTOR reduced lymphangiectasia by 76% within 7 days without affecting normal lymphatics. Efficacy of rapamycin was not increased by coadministration with the other agents. In prevention trials, rapamycin suppressed VEGF-C–driven mTOR phosphorylation and lymphatic endothelial cell sprouting and proliferation. However, in reversal trials, no lymphatic endothelial cell proliferation was present to block in established lymphangiectasia, and rapamycin did not increase caspase-dependent apoptosis. However, rapamycin potently suppressed Prox1 and VEGFR-3. These experiments revealed that lymphangiectasia is remarkably resistant to regression but is responsive to rapamycin, which rapidly reduces and normalizes the abnormal lymphatics without affecting normal lymphatics.

Authors

Peter Baluk, Li-Chin Yao, Julio C. Flores, Dongwon Choi, Young-Kwon Hong, Donald M. McDonald

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Figure 8

Effects of rapamycin on Prox1, VEGFR-3, and LYVE-1 in lymphatics of CCSP/VEGF-C mice.

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Effects of rapamycin on Prox1, VEGFR-3, and LYVE-1 in lymphatics of CCSP...
(A and B) Confocal micrographs comparing Prox1 (A) and VEGFR-3 (B) immunofluorescence in tracheas of CCSP/VEGF-C mice treated with vehicle or rapamycin (2 days, P42–P44). Images photographed with matching brightness and contrast settings. (C) Surface contour plots of intensity of Prox1 fluorescence in A after treatment with vehicle or rapamycin. Prox1 (D) and VEGFR-3 (E) fluorescence intensities in CCSP/VEGF-C mice treated, as in A and B. (F) Confocal micrographs of LYVE-1 immunofluorescence in tracheas of CCSP/VEGF-C mice, showing no difference in intensity after treatment with vehicle or rapamycin (14 days, P42–P56). (G) Rapamycin dose-response effect on Prox1 fluorescence intensity. *P < 0.05 vs. vehicle, ANOVA, n = 4–6 mice/group. (H) qRT-PCR measurements of Prox1 and VEGFR-3 expression in tracheas of CCSP/VEGF-C mice on vehicle or rapamycin (7 days, P42–P49). *P < 0.05 vs. baseline, †P < 0.05 vs. vehicle, ANOVA, n = 3–6 mice/group. Scale bars: 200 μm (A and B); 50 μm (F). Box and whisker plots show the median, first and third quartiles, and maximum and minimum.

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