4.6 Article

Pericyte Requirement for Anti-Leak Action of Angiopoietin-1 and Vascular Remodeling in Sustained Inflammation

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PATHOLOGY
Volume 178, Issue 6, Pages 2897-2909

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.ajpath.2011.02.008

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [HL-24136, HL-59157, HL-096511]
  2. Belgian American Educational Foundation
  3. University of Liege, Belgium
  4. Neoangio Program of the Walloon Region
  5. Swedish Wenner-Gren Foundation
  6. UICC American Cancer Society
  7. University of California, San Francisco
  8. American Heart Association

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Blood vessel leakiness is an early, transient event in acute inflammation but can also persist as vessels undergo remodeling in sustained inflammation. Angiopoietin/Tie2 signaling can reduce the leakiness through changes in endothelial cells. The role of pericytes in this action has been unknown. We used the selective PDGF-B-blocking oligonucleotide aptamer AX102 to determine whether disruption of pericyteendothelial crosstalk alters vascular leakiness or remodeling in the airways of mice under four different conditions: i) baseline, ii) acute inflammation induced by bradykinin, sustained inflammation after 7-day infection by the respiratory pathogen Mycoplasma pulmonis, or iv) leakage after bradykinin challenge in the presence of vascular stabilization by the angiopoietin-1 (Angl) mimic COMP-Angl for 7 days. AX102 reduced pericyte coverage but did not alter the leakage of microspheres from tracheal blood vessels at baseline or after bradykinin; however, AX102 exaggerated leakage at 7 days after M. pulmonis infection and increased vascular remodeling and disease severity at 14 days. AX102 also abolished the antileakage effect of COMP-Angl at 7 days. Together, these findings show that pericyte contributions to endothelial stability have greater dependence on PDGF-B during the development of sustained inflammation, when pericyte dynamics accompany vascular remodeling, than under baseline conditions or in acute inflammation. The findings also show that the antileakage action of Angl requires PDGF-dependent actions of pericytes in maintaining endothelial stability. (Am J Pathol 2011, 178:2897-2909; DOI: 10.1016/j.ajpath.2011.02.008)

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