1. Academic Validation
  2. EGFL7 ligates αvβ3 integrin to enhance vessel formation

EGFL7 ligates αvβ3 integrin to enhance vessel formation

  • Blood. 2013 Apr 11;121(15):3041-50. doi: 10.1182/blood-2011-11-394882.
Iva Nikolic 1 Nevenka Dudvarski Stankovic Frank Bicker Jeannette Meister Helene Braun Khader Awwad Jan Baumgart Kirsten Simon Serge C Thal Chinmoy Patra Patrick N Harter Karl H Plate Felix B Engel Stefanie Dimmeler Johannes A Eble Michel Mittelbronn Michael K Schäfer Benno Jungblut Emmanouil Chavakis Ingrid Fleming Mirko H H Schmidt
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Molecular Signal Transduction Laboratory at the Institute of Microscopic Anatomy and Neurobiology, Focus Program Translational Neuroscience (FTN), Johannes Gutenberg University School of Medicine, Mainz, Germany.
Abstract

Angiogenesis, defined as blood vessel formation from a preexisting vasculature, is governed by multiple signal cascades including Integrin receptors, in particular Integrin αVβ3. Here we identify the endothelial cell (EC)-secreted factor epidermal growth factor-like protein 7 (EGFL7) as a novel specific ligand of Integrin αVβ3, thus providing mechanistic insight into its proangiogenic actions in vitro and in vivo. Specifically, EGFL7 attaches to the extracellular matrix and by its interaction with Integrin αVβ3 increases the motility of EC, which allows EC to move on a sticky underground during vessel remodeling. We provide evidence that the deregulation of EGFL7 in zebrafish embryos leads to a severe integrin-dependent malformation of the caudal venous plexus, pointing toward the significance of EGFL7 in vessel development. In biopsy specimens of patients with neurologic diseases, vascular EGFL7 expression rose with increasing EC proliferation. Further, EGFL7 became upregulated in vessels of the stroke penumbra using a mouse model of reversible middle cerebral artery occlusion. Our data suggest that EGFL7 expression depends on the remodeling state of the existing vasculature rather than on the phenotype of neurologic disease analyzed. In sum, our work sheds a novel LIGHT on the molecular mechanism EGFL7 engages to govern physiological and pathological angiogenesis.

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