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Title: Angiogenesis
Description: 2nd Year Biomedical Science Degree Notes on different types of angiogenesis
Description: 2nd Year Biomedical Science Degree Notes on different types of angiogenesis
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L11 Angiogenesis
Angiogenesis is the formation of vessels from pre-existing vessels
Functions of endothelial cells
Barrier function
Blood clotting
Inflammation
Vasoconstriction and vasodilation
Angiogenesis
Roles of angiogenesis
During development
Physiological processes
o Wound healing
o Menstrual cycle
o Adaptation to increased muscle activity
Pathological processes
o Cancer
o Inflammatory
o Diabetic retinopathy
Vessel formation during development I – Vaculogenesis
Vasculogenesis is the formation of blood vessels from mesodermal derived angioblasts
Endothelial progenitors (angioblasts) differentiate from mesodermal cells
Angioblasts coalesce to form first embryonic vessels – dorsal aorta and cardinal vein
Angioblasts from blood islands which fuse and remodel to form a primitive capillary plexus (no hierarchy of
arteries and veins in size)
Vessel formation during development II - Angiogenesis
Angiogeneic remodelling of dorsal aorta, cardinal vein and vascular plexi give rise to arteries, veins and
capillaries
Angiogeneic sprouting of new vessels
Pericytes are recruited to stabilise capillaries
Lymphatic endothelial cells sprout from veins and form the lymphatic system via lymphangiogenesis
HYPOXIA DRIVES ANGIOGENESIS
As distance from a vessel increases, there is:
Increased acidity
Increased lactic acid
Decreased ATP and glucose can’t do anerobic resp
Decreased O2
HIF-1 is a transcription factor (Hypoxic inducible factor) a master regulator of O2 homeostasis
Drives production of VEGF and Angiopoietin 2
HIF-1 is a transcription factor consisting of two subunits HIF-1a and HIF-1B
Degradation of the HIF-1a subunit is regulated in response to oxygen levels
In high O2 HIF-1a is degraded
Proline hydroxylase enzyme hydroxylates proline residues on HIF-1a
Is at dynamic equilibrium in these conditions if favours the hydroxylated state
This is recognised and bound by a ubiquitin ligase which catalyses the poly-ubiquitinates of HIF-1a
Poly-ubiquitinate HIF-1a is degraded by the proteasome
In low O2 HIF-1a is stabilised and induces expression of proangiogenic factors
Not enough O2 to drive the proline hydroxylation of HIF-1a
HIF-1a associates with HIF-1B and induces transcription of genes needed for adaptation to hypoxic conditions
A key target of HIF-1 is VEGF
The functions of VEGF in endothelial cells
VEGF-A is the most potent of the VEGF family of growth factors at driving angiogenesis
VEGFR signals via activation of VEGFR-2, a receptor tyrosine kinase
Dimerisation of VEGFR-2 activates signalling pathways which affects
o Proliferation
o Survival
o Migration
o Vascular permeability – via modulation of junctional proteins
The angiogenic switch
There are a number of pro and anti-angiogenic factors
Angiogenesis occurs when the effects of angiogenic activators are greater than those of the inhibitors
Modes of angiogenesis
New vessels can form by sprouting or splitting (intussusception)
Intussusception involves the formation of a pillar which elongates
splitting the vessel in two
o Rapid increase in capillarity
o Requires minimal endothelial proliferation
Sprouting angiogenesis
Loosening of adherens junctions by VEGF regulates VE-cadherin
Endothelial cells secrete proteases to remodel pre-existing interstitial matrix
Selection of tip cell to guide the newly forming sprout
Filipodia actin driven extensions, sense the extracellular environment
Angiogenic factors (e
...
VEGF, FGF)
Pericyte detachment mediated by angiopoietin 2 (Ang2)
Increased permeability permits extravasation of plasma proteins (such as fibrinogen and fibronectin) to deposit a
provisional matrix layer
...
g
...
Stalk cells behind the tip cell proliferate and extend the sprout, VEGFR-2 is downregulated in stalk cells
The sprouts from adjacent vessels grow towards one another
Stabilisation of the newly formed vessel
o Signalling between endothelial cells and pericytes maintain quiescence of the newly formed vessel,
Angiopoietin 1 (Ang1)
o Formation of tight junctions and barrier function
o Basement membrane deposition
o Pericyte maturation (PDGF, Ang1)
Specifying tip and stalk cell fate
Notch and delta signalling
VEGF signals one cell will have higher Delta levels, the other will have higher notch
Tip cells have high Delta-4, stalk cells have higher notch
Stalk cells less responsive to VEGF so that tip stays the tip
Exercise and angiogenesis in skeletal muscle
Exercise and the contractile activity of muscle influences capillary growth
Mechanical stretch and shear stress (flow) stimulate angiogenesis
VEGF plays an essential role in driving capillary growth
Shear stress primarily induces longitudinal splitting and this requires eNOS
signalling
Tissue stretch induces angiogenic sprouting
Passive stretch also stimulates VEGF sprouting
Pathological Angiogenesis
Angiogenesis contributes to the pathology of inflammatory diseases and the
growth and metastasis of solid tumours
Tumour growth and hyperplasia in inflammatory disease increases the distance of cells from vessels and hypoxia
drives VEGF production
Chronic hypoxic giving rise to high levels of VEGF and inflammatory cytokines create a pro-angiogenic
environment
Vessel formation is abnormal leading to leaky and poorly perfused vessels and persistent hypoxia
The leaky vessels facilitate leukocyte extravasation in inflammatory disease
In tumours/inflammation the vessels aren’t very organised because there is constant VEGF
...
Angiogenisis in Rheumatoid Arthritis
Modulating angiogenesis – inhibiting VEFG signalling
Monoclonal antibody to VEGF
o Bevacizumab
...
g
...
Assessing angiogenic sprouting – the spheroid assay
Assessing angiogenic sprouting – the co-culture assay
Fibroblast produce extracellular matrix and secrete VEGF
Co-culture fibroblasts with endothelial cells, then image tubule formation
Can add VEGFR-2 inhibitors to see difference
Title: Angiogenesis
Description: 2nd Year Biomedical Science Degree Notes on different types of angiogenesis
Description: 2nd Year Biomedical Science Degree Notes on different types of angiogenesis