4.7 Article

Diverse Functions of Retinoic Acid in Brain Vascular Development

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 36, Issue 29, Pages 7786-7801

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3952-15.2016

Keywords

brain vascular development; cerebrovasculature; endothelial cell; retinoic acid; VEGF; WNT

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke Grant) [K99-R00 NS070920]
  2. National Institute on Drug Abuse Grant [R01 DA017627]
  3. American Health Association/American Academy of Neurology

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As neural structures grow in size and increase metabolic demand, the CNS vasculature undergoes extensive growth, remodeling, and maturation. Signals from neural tissue act on endothelial cells to stimulate blood vessel ingression, vessel patterning, and acquisition of mature brain vascular traits, most notably the blood-brain barrier. Using mouse genetic and in vitro approaches, we identified retinoic acid (RA) as an important regulator of brain vascular development via non-cell-autonomous and cell-autonomous regulation of endothelial WNT signaling. Our analysis of globally RA-deficient embryos (Rdh10 mutants) points to an important, non-cell-autonomous function for RA in the development of the vasculature in the neocortex. We demonstrate that Rdh10 mutants have severe defects in cerebrovascular development and that this phenotype correlates with near absence of endothelial WNT signaling, specifically in the cerebrovasculature, and substantially elevated expression of WNT inhibitors in the neocortex. We show that RA can suppress the expression of WNT inhibitors in neocortical progenitors. Analysis of vasculature in non-neocortical brain regions suggested that RA may have a separate, cell-autonomous function in brain endothelial cells to inhibit WNT signaling. Using both gain and loss of RA signaling approaches, we show that RA signaling in brain endothelial cells can inhibit WNT-beta-catenin transcriptional activity and that this is required to moderate the expression of WNT target Sox17. From this, a model emerges in which RA acts upstream of the WNT pathway via non-cell-autonomous and cell-autonomous mechanisms to ensure the formation of an adequate and stable brain vascular plexus.

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