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Wasp controls oriented migration of endothelial cells to achieve functional vascular patterning
来源: | 作者:André Rosa 1 2, Wolfgang Giese 1 2, Katja Meier 1 2, Silvanus Alt 1 2, Alexandra Klaus-Bergmann 1 2, Lowell T Edgar 3, Eireen Bartels 1 2, Russell Collins 1 2, Anna Szymborska 1 2, Baptiste Coxam 1 2, Miguel O Bernabeu 3 4, Holger Gerhardt 1 2 | 发布时间: 2022-01-08 | 365 次浏览 | 分享到:

Endothelial cell migration and proliferation are essential for the establishment of a hierarchical organization of blood vessels and optimal distribution of blood. However, how these cellular processes are quantitatively coordinated to drive vascular network morphogenesis remains unknown. Here, using the zebrafish vasculature as a model system, we demonstrate that the balanced distribution of endothelial cells as well as the resulting regularity of vessel caliber, is a result of cell migration from veins towards arteries and cell proliferation in veins. We identify the Wiskott-Aldrich Syndrome protein (WASp) as an important molecular regulator of this process and show that loss of coordinated migration from veins to arteries upon wasb depletion results in aberrant vessel morphology and the formation of persistent arteriovenous shunts. We demonstrate that WASp achieves its function through the coordination of junctional actin assembly and PECAM1 recruitment and provide evidence that this is conserved in human. Overall, we demonstrate that functional vascular patterning in the zebrafish trunk is established through differential cell migration regulated by junctional actin, and that interruption of differential migration may represent a pathomechanism in vascular malformations.

Keywords: F-actin; Migration; Proliferation; Shear stress; Vessel remodelling; WASp.