[HTML][HTML] Aberrant lymphatic endothelial progenitors in lymphatic malformation development

JK Wu, C Kitajewski, M Reiley, CH Keung… - PLoS …, 2015 - journals.plos.org
JK Wu, C Kitajewski, M Reiley, CH Keung, J Monteagudo, JP Andrews, P Liou…
PLoS One, 2015journals.plos.org
Lymphatic malformations (LMs) are vascular anomalies thought to arise from dysregulated
lymphangiogenesis. These lesions impose a significant burden of disease on affected
individuals. LM pathobiology is poorly understood, hindering the development of effective
treatments. In the present studies, immunostaining of LM tissues revealed that endothelial
cells lining aberrant lymphatic vessels and cells in the surrounding stroma expressed the
stem cell marker, CD133, and the lymphatic endothelial protein, podoplanin. Isolated patient …
Lymphatic malformations (LMs) are vascular anomalies thought to arise from dysregulated lymphangiogenesis. These lesions impose a significant burden of disease on affected individuals. LM pathobiology is poorly understood, hindering the development of effective treatments. In the present studies, immunostaining of LM tissues revealed that endothelial cells lining aberrant lymphatic vessels and cells in the surrounding stroma expressed the stem cell marker, CD133, and the lymphatic endothelial protein, podoplanin. Isolated patient-derived CD133+ LM cells expressed stem cell genes (NANOG, Oct4), circulating endothelial cell precursor proteins (CD90, CD146, c-Kit, VEGFR-2), and lymphatic endothelial proteins (podoplanin, VEGFR-3). Consistent with a progenitor cell identity, CD133+ LM cells were multipotent and could be differentiated into fat, bone, smooth muscle, and lymphatic endothelial cells in vitro. CD133+ cells were compared to CD133− cells isolated from LM fluids. CD133− LM cells had lower expression of stem cell genes, but expressed circulating endothelial precursor proteins and high levels of lymphatic endothelial proteins, VE-cadherin, CD31, podoplanin, VEGFR-3 and Prox1. CD133− LM cells were not multipotent, consistent with a differentiated lymphatic endothelial cell phenotype. In a mouse xenograft model, CD133+ LM cells differentiated into lymphatic endothelial cells that formed irregularly dilated lymphatic channels, phenocopying human LMs. In vivo, CD133+ LM cells acquired expression of differentiated lymphatic endothelial cell proteins, podoplanin, LYVE1, Prox1, and VEGFR-3, comparable to expression found in LM patient tissues. Taken together, these data identify a novel LM progenitor cell population that differentiates to form the abnormal lymphatic structures characteristic of these lesions, recapitulating the human LM phenotype. This LM progenitor cell population may contribute to the clinically refractory behavior of LMs.
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