Neurovascular development uses VEGF-A signaling to regulate blood vessel ingression into the neural tube

Author:

James Jennifer M.1,Gewolb Cara1,Bautch Victoria L.123

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, The University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC 27599, USA.

2. Carolina Cardiovascular Biology Center, The University of North Carolina,Chapel Hill, NC 27599, USA.

3. Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center, The University of North Carolina,Chapel Hill, NC 27599, USA.

Abstract

Neurovascular development requires communication between two developing organs, the neuroepithelium and embryonic blood vessels. We investigated the role of VEGF-A signaling in the embryonic crosstalk required for ingression of angiogenic vessel sprouts into the developing neural tube. As the neural tube develops, blood vessels enter at specific points medially and ventrally from the surrounding perineural vascular plexus. Localized ectopic expression of heparin-binding VEGF165 or VEGF189 from the developing avian neural tube resulted in supernumerary blood vessel ingression points and disrupted vessel patterning. By contrast, localized ectopic neural expression of non-heparin-binding VEGF121 did not produce supernumerary blood vessel ingression points, although the vessels that entered the neural tube became dysmorphogenic. Localized loss of endogenous VEGF-A signaling in the developing neural tube via ectopic expression of the VEGF inhibitor sFlt-1 locally blocked blood vessel ingression. The VEGF pathway manipulations were temporally controlled and did not dramatically affect neural tube maturation and dorsal-ventral patterning. Thus, neural-derived VEGF-A has a direct role in the spatially localized molecular crosstalk that is required for neurovascular development and vessel patterning in the developing neural tube.

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Subject

Developmental Biology,Molecular Biology

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