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Reversible retinal vessel closure from VEGF-induced leukocyte plugging
Yuanyuan Liu, … , Dietmar Vestweber, Peter A. Campochiaro
Yuanyuan Liu, … , Dietmar Vestweber, Peter A. Campochiaro
Published September 21, 2017
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2017;2(18):e95530. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.95530.
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Research Article Vascular biology

Reversible retinal vessel closure from VEGF-induced leukocyte plugging

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Abstract

Clinical trials in patients with macular edema due to diabetic retinopathy or retinal vein occlusion (RVO) have shown that suppression of VEGF not only improves macular edema, but also reopens closed retinal vessels, prevents progression of vessel closure, and improves retinopathy. In this study, we show the molecular basis for those clinical observations. Increased retinal levels of VEGF in mice cause plugging of retinal vessels with leukocytes, vessel closure, and hypoxia. Suppression of VEGF reduces leukocyte plugging, causing reperfusion of closed vessels. Activation of VEGFR1 contributes to leukocyte recruitment, because it is significantly reduced by an anti-VEGFR1–neutralizing antibody. High VEGF increases transcriptional activity of NF-κB and expression of NF-κB target genes, particularly Vcam1. Injection of an anti-VCAM-1–neutralizing antibody reduces VEGF-induced leukocyte plugging. These data explain the broad range of benefits obtained by VEGF suppression in patients with ischemic retinopathies, provide an important insight into the pathogenesis of RVO and diabetic retinopathy, and suggest that sustained suppression of VEGF early in the course of these diseases may prevent vessel closure, worsening ischemia, and disease progression. This study also identifies VEGFR1 and VCAM-1 as molecular targets whose suppression could supplement VEGF neutralization for treatment of RVO and diabetic retinopathy.

Authors

Yuanyuan Liu, Jikui Shen, Seth D. Fortmann, Jiangxia Wang, Dietmar Vestweber, Peter A. Campochiaro

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Figure 6

VEGFR1 contributes to leukocyte recruitment.

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VEGFR1 contributes to leukocyte recruitment.
C57BL/6 mice were given a t...
C57BL/6 mice were given a tail vein injection of 100 μg rat anti-mouse VEGFR1 or rat IgG and then an intravitreous injection of 200 ng VEGF; 24 hours later, mice were perfused with FITC-labeled Con A. There were many intravascular leukocytes in rat IgG-injected mice (A) and significantly fewer in those injected with anti-VEGFR1 (B and C) (n = 6 for rat IgG and n = 10 for anti-VEGFR1; *P = 0.0069 for difference from rat IgG by unpaired t test). Twenty-four hours after intravitreous injection of 200 ng VEGF, C57BL/6 mice were perfused with FITC-labeled Con A (green) and retinal flat mounts were counterstained (red) with anti-F4/80 (D–F) or anti-Ly6G (G–I). Scale bar: 50 μm (D–I).

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