Blood and lymphatic endothelial cell-specific differentiation programs are stringently controlled by the tissue environment

Author:

Amatschek Stefan12,Kriehuber Ernst12,Bauer Wolfgang12,Reininger Barbel12,Meraner Paul3,Wolpl Alois3,Schweifer Norbert4,Haslinger Christian4,Stingl Georg2,Maurer Dieter12

Affiliation:

1. Research Center for Molecular Medicine (CeMM) of the Austrian Academy of Sciences, Vienna, Austria;

2. Department of Dermatology, Division of Immunology, Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Medical University of Vienna, Austria;

3. Laboratory of Medical Genetics, Martinsried, Germany;

4. Boehringer-Ingelheim Austria, Vienna, Austria

Abstract

Abstract The discovery of marker proteins of human blood (BECs) and lymphatic endothelial cells (LECs) has allowed researchers to isolate these cells. So far, efforts to unravel their transcriptional and functional programs made use of cultured cells only. Hence, it is unknown to which extent previously identified LEC- and BEC-specific programs are representative of the in vivo situation. Here, we define the human BEC- and LEC-specific in vivo transcriptomes by comparative genomewide expression profiling of freshly isolated cutaneous EC subsets and of non-EC skin cells (fibroblasts, mast cells, dendritic cells, epithelial cells). Interestingly, the expression of most of the newly identified EC subset-discriminating genes depends strictly on the in vivo tissue environment as revealed by comparative analyses of freshly isolated and cultured EC subsets. The identified environment-dependent, EC subset-restricted gene expression regulates lineage fidelity, fluid exchange, and MHC class II–dependent antigen presentation. As an example for a BEC-restricted in vivo function, we show that non-activated BECs in situ, but not in vitro, assemble and display MHC class II protein complexes loaded with self-peptides. Thus, our data demonstrate the key importance of using precisely defined native ECs for the global identification of in vivo relevant cell functions.

Publisher

American Society of Hematology

Subject

Cell Biology,Hematology,Immunology,Biochemistry

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