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Vol. 13, No. 3, pp. 295-306, February 1, 1999
1 European Molecular Biology Laboratory, D-69117 Heidelberg, Germany; 2 Max-Planck-Institute for Physiological and Clinical Research, W.G. Kerckhoff Institute, 61231 Bad Nauheim, Germany; 3 Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Tarrytown, New York 10591 USA
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Abstract |
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Eph receptor tyrosine kinases and their cell-surface-bound ligands, the ephrins, regulate axon guidance and bundling in the developing brain, control cell migration and adhesion, and help patterning the embryo. Here we report that two ephrinB ligands and three EphB receptors are expressed in and regulate the formation of the vascular network. Mice lacking ephrinB2 and a proportion of double mutants deficient in EphB2 and EphB3 receptor signaling die in utero before embryonic day 11.5 (E11.5) because of defects in the remodeling of the embryonic vascular system. Our phenotypic analysis suggests complex interactions and multiple functions of Eph receptors and ephrins in the embryonic vasculature. Interaction between ephrinB2 on arteries and its EphB receptors on veins suggests a role in defining boundaries between arterial and venous domains. Expression of ephrinB1 by arterial and venous endothelial cells and EphB3 by veins and some arteries indicates that endothelial cell-to-cell interactions between ephrins and Eph receptors are not restricted to the border between arteries and veins. Furthermore, expression of ephrinB2 and EphB2 in mesenchyme adjacent to vessels and vascular defects in ephB2/ephB3 double mutants indicate a requirement for ephrin-Eph signaling between endothelial cells and surrounding mesenchymal cells. Finally, ephrinB ligands induce capillary sprouting in vitro with a similar efficiency as angiopoietin-1 (Ang1) and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), demonstrating a stimulatory role of ephrins in the remodeling of the developing vascular system.
[Key Words: Angiogenesis; ephrins; Eph; receptor tyrosine kinase; vasculogenesis]
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Introduction |
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The family of Eph receptor tyrosine kinases and their ephrin
ligands play important roles in a variety of processes during embryonic
development of mammals, lower vertebrates, and invertebrates such as
Caenorhabditis elegans. They regulate
topographic map formation in the
retinotectal/retinocollicular system (Cheng et al. 1995
;
Drescher et al. 1995
; Nakamoto et al. 1996
; Frisen et al. 1998
) and
play essential roles in the formation and fasciculation of brain
commissures (Henkemeyer et al. 1996
; Orioli et al. 1996
; Park et al.
1997
). They have additional important functions in patterning of
embryonic structures of the brain (Xu et al. 1995
, 1996
) and somites
(Durbin et al. 1998
). Ephrins control migration of neural crest cells
into branchial arches and somites (Krull et al. 1997
; Smith et al.
1997
; Wang and Anderson 1997
). In these systems, ephrin-Eph
interactions are thought to be mainly repulsive, that is, navigating
growth cones or migrating cells expressing Eph receptors would turn
away from cells expressing the corresponding ephrin ligand (Drescher et
al. 1995
; Nakamoto et al. 1996
; Brennan et al. 1997
; Krull et al. 1997
;
Wang and Anderson 1997
). Repulsive interactions and complementary
expression patterns suggest that ephrins and Eph receptors define
spatial boundaries in the developing embryo (Gale et al. 1996
).
The ephrin-Eph system functions in cell-to-cell rather than long range
communications, because Eph receptors and all known ephrin ligands are
attached to the plasma membrane (Davis et al. 1994
; Orioli and Klein
1997
). Ephrins can be divided into two subclasses: EphrinA ligands
(ephrinA1-A5) are tethered to the cell surface via a
glycosylphophatidylinositol (GPI)-anchor, whereas ephrinB ligands
(ephrinB1-B3) are inserted into the plasma membrane via a
transmembrane region followed by a conserved cytoplasmic domain. This
subdivision also matches the binding preferences of ephrinA and ephrinB
molecules for the corresponding EphA or EphB receptor subfamilies,
respectively, whereas within these subfamilies, interactions are highly
promiscuous (Brambilla et al. 1995
; Gale et al. 1996
). Unlike soluble
ligands for other receptor tyrosine kinases, ephrin molecules appear to
be presented in a clustered state to acquire high stimulating
activation towards their cognate Eph receptors (Davis et al. 1994
). The
state of aggregation could perhaps determine differential signaling
responses of the Eph receptor (Stein et al. 1998
) and ephrin-expressing cells may elicit different responses in Eph receptor-expressing neighbors depending on their degree of ligand clustering. With their
highly conserved cytoplasmic domains, transmembrane ephrinB molecules
resemble membrane receptors. Accumulating evidence points to an active
signaling role for ephrinB molecules, resulting in reverse or
in
combination with their ligand function
bidirectional signal
transduction (Brückner and Klein 1998
).
Evidence from an in vivo angiogenesis assay and in vitro studies
suggested roles for ephrins and Eph receptors in the formation of blood
vessels. EphrinA1 has in vivo angiogenic properties during inflammatory
angiogenesis induced by tumor necrosis factor
(Pandey et al.
1995
). Clustered ephrinB1 promotes endothelial capillary-like assembly
and cell attachment in vitro (Stein et al. 1998
). During embryonic
development, the first step of blood vessel formation involves the
differentiation of primitive mesodermal cells into vascular endothelial
cells, which ultimately will line the internal surfaces of all vessels.
Two processes can be distinguished. Vasculogenesis defines the
formation of tubular structures from a dispersed population of
endothelial cell precursors into a rather homogeneous honeycomb-like primary capillary network, the so-called primary capillary plexus of
the embryo and extra-embryonic structures such as the yolk sac (Risau
and Flamme 1995
). Vasculogenesis also results in the formation of the
primordia of the heart and large trunk vessels, such as the dorsal
aorta and the cardinal veins. In a second process, termed angiogenesis,
the primary vascular network is remodeled into a hierarchical network
of small and large vessels through sprouting of new vessels,
remodeling, and splitting of existing vessels. Moreover, avascular
tissues such as the neuroepithelium are vascularized by sprouting of
new capillaries. Angiogenesis is a complex process involving
endothelial cell proliferation, chemotactic migration, and functional
maturation (Risau 1997
).
Recent studies have identified several receptor tyrosine kinases
expressed on endothelial cells and their ligands as key regulators of
vascular development during embryogenesis. Vascular endothelial growth
factor (VEGF) and its tyrosine kinase receptor VEGF-R1/Flk-1 are essential
for vasculogenesis and endothelial cell differentiation, whereas the
VEGF-R2/Flt receptor is critically required for the organization of the embryonic vasculature (Fong et al. 1995
; Shalaby et
al. 1995
, 1997
; Carmeliet et al. 1996
; Ferrara et al. 1996
). Angiopoietin-1 (Ang-1) and its tyrosine kinase receptor
Tie-2/Tek are important regulators of angiogenesis and
heart development, whereas Tie-1 receptors are important for blood
vessel integrity (Dumont et al. 1994
; Puri et al. 1995
; Sato et al.
1995
; Suri et al. 1996
). Recently, ephrinB2 has been shown to be
required for the remodeling of the embryonic vascular system (Wang et
al. 1998
). Because of its exclusive expression on arteries and the complementary expression of one of its cognate receptors, EphB4, on
veins, it was suggested that ephrinB2 acts both as a ligand and as a
receptor for EphB4 and that reciprocal, possibly repulsive signaling
between these two types of vessels is crucial for angiogenic remodeling
during the maturation of the vascular network (Wang et al. 1998
;
Yancopoulos et al. 1998
).
In this report we implicate additional Eph receptors and ephrins in
vascular development, thus indicating a much greater level of
complexity in ephrin-Eph interactions. In contrast to Wang et al.
(1998)
, we find that the ligand ephrinB1 is coexpressed with ephrinB2
in arteries, that ephrinB1 and EphB3 are coexpressed with EphB4 in
venous endothelial cells, and that EphB3 is expressed by some arteries.
Our findings therefore suggest that cell-to-cell interactions between
ephrins and Eph receptors are not restricted to the border between
arteries and veins, but occur and are required throughout most of the
embryonic vasculature. Consistent with our expression data, we show
that double-mutant mice deficient in both EphB2 and EphB3 receptor
signaling have a partially penetrant phenotype that resembles much
of the ephrinB2
/
phenotype.
Prominent expression of ephrinB2 and EphB2 in mesenchymal cells
adjacent to endothelial cells further indicates that ephrins and Eph
receptors regulate and are required for interactions between endothelial and mesenchymal cells. Finally, we demonstrate in vitro
capillary sprout-inducing activity for both ephrinB1 and ephrinB2,
describing a stimulatory cellular response for these ligands during
angiogenic remodeling.
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Results |
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Coexpression of multiple ephrins and Eph receptors in yolk sac and embryonic blood vessels
Wang et al. (1998)
recently generated an
ephrinB2/taulacZ allele to demonstrate ephrinB2
expression specifically in arteries and absent on veins. Conversely, in
situ hybridization analysis indicated exclusive expression of EphB4 on
veins. No other Eph receptor or ephrin ligand was detected on blood
vessels. Our own expression analysis, however, indicates the presence
of additional ephrinB molecules and EphB receptors in blood vessels.
Although immunostainings for ephrinB2 showed strong expression on
arteries (Fig. 1A) and barely detectable expression
on veins (Fig. 1B), staining with the EphB3 receptor ectodomain protein
probe fused to alkaline phosphatase (EphB3-AP), which binds to several
ephrinBs, revealed the presence of ephrinB ligands on both arteries and veins (Fig. 1C,D). Next, we assayed for EphB receptor expression using
ligand-AP probes. Whereas ephrinB2-AP preferentially stained veins
(Fig. 1E,F), ephrinB1-AP bound equally well to arteries and veins
(Fig. 1G,H), indicating the presence on veins of at least two EphB
receptors with different binding preferences for the two ephrinB
ligands. RT-PCR analysis confirmed the presence of ephrinB1, ephrinB2,
EphB2, EphB3, and EphB4 mRNAs in yolk sacs (Fig. 1I).
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Next, we assayed for expression of ephrinB ligands and EphB receptors
in E9.5 wild-type embryos by in situ hybridization analysis and
AP-fusion protein staining. EphB1 is largely confined to the nervous
system, and ephrinB3 and EphB2 are expressed in neuroectoderm and heart
(data not shown; Henkemeyer et al. 1996
; K. Brückner, J.P.
Labrador, P. Scheiffele, A. Herb, P.H. Seeburg, and R. Klein, in
prep.); EphB2 was also found in embryonic mesenchyme (see below). Two
ephrins, ephrinB1 and ephrinB2, and two EphB receptors, EphB3 and
EphB4, were expressed on embryonic blood vessels. EphrinB2 and EphB4
were expressed in complementary patterns; ephrinB2 mRNA was
found in arteries, including dorsal aorta and aortic arches (Fig.
2B), whereas EphB4 was expressed on all
major veins, including anterior and posterior cardinal, and umbilical
veins (Fig. 2F; Wang et al. 1998
). In contrast to published data (Wang
et al. 1998
), EphB3 was also prominently expressed on all
major veins, and, in addition, showed specific expression on aortic
arches (Fig. 2E). mRNA expression patterns were independently confirmed by detecting receptor protein through ephrinB2-AP staining of veins
and aortic arches (Fig. 2D). As in yolk sacs, ephrinB2 was not the only
ligand expressed by embryonic blood vessels. ephrinB1 mRNA was
found in all major blood vessel primordia (Fig. 2C). Coexpression of
ephrinB1 and ephrinB2 on dorsal aorta and aortic arches was confirmed by radioactive in situ hybridization analysis by
use of oligonucleotide probes (K. Brückner, J.P. Labrador, P. Scheiffele, A. Herb, P.H. Seeburg, and R. Klein, in prep.). Sections of
whole-mount stained embryos revealed that essentially all endothelial
cells lining the veins analyzed in our study, including anterior and
posterior cardinal and umbilical veins, coexpress ephrinB1 and two
receptors, EphB3 and EphB4 (Fig. 2H-J). Similar coexpression of B
subclass ligands and receptors was observed in cultured human
microvascular endothelial cells and found to be of functional relevance
for in vitro angiogenesis (Stein et al. 1998
). Thus, our findings
demonstrate coexpression of two ephrinB ligands on arteries,
coexpression of ephrinB1, ephrinB2, and EphB3 on aortic arches, and
coexpression of ephrinB1, EphB3, and EphB4 in veins, suggesting complex
cell-to-cell interactions via ephrins and Eph receptors on endothelial
cells in many vascular structures.
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Expression of ephrins and Eph receptors at endothelial-mesenchymal interfaces
During somitogenesis, ephrinB ligands, and EphB2 and EphA4 receptors
are expressed in and are partially required for somitogenesis, whereas
in parallel regulating neural crest migration and motor axon guidance
(Durbin et al. 1998
and references therein). We now show that
intersomitic vessels (identified by Flk-1 expression, Fig.
3A) that form at somite boundaries express EphB3 and
EphB4 receptors (Fig. 3C,D) at a time when ephrinB2 is expressed in the
caudal half of somites (Fig. 3B). Double immunostaining for ephrinB2
and PECAM-1 demonstrates the close contact between ephrinB2-expressing cells of the dermomyotome with vascular endothelial cells that express
EphB receptors (Fig. 3E,F). This suggests a functional interaction
between somitic ephrinB2 and endothelial Eph receptors in the
morphogenesis of intersomitic vessels and the connecting capillary
network. The umbilical vein originating at the sinus venosus near the
heart represents another example of possible functional interactions
between a mesenchymal EphB receptor and endothelial ephrinB ligands.
EphB2 expression, visualized by staining for
-galactosidase of
ephB2-lacZ heterozygotes, was found in mesenchymal cells
immediately adjacent to the umbilical vein (Fig. 3G), whereas venous
endothelial cells, identified by PECAM-1 staining (Fig. 3H), express
ephrinB1 and EphB3/EphB4 receptors (see Fig. 2).
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Requirement for ephrinB2 and EphB2/EphB3 receptors in yolk sac and embyonic vascular development
Targeted inactivation of the mouse ephrinB2 gene (Bergemann
et al. 1995
) (see Materials and Methods) revealed a requirement for
ephrinB2 in the formation of the embryonic vasculature.
ephrinB2
/
mutants at E9.5 and
E10 were growth retarded and exhibited an inflated pericardium with a
beating heart, but with little, if any, blood flow in the embryo (data
not shown). E9.5 wild-type yolk sacs exhibited hierarchically organized
vessel architecture with numerous large vitelline vessels, whereas
ephrinB2
/
mutants of the same
stage had pale yolk sacs (Fig. 4B) and contained a
primitive vascular plexus consisting of a uniformly organized network
of small interconnecting vessels (data not shown), much like the
recently reported phenotype of ephrinB2/taulacZ
mutants (Wang et al. 1998
). Our independently generated
ephrinB2
/
mutant therefore
confirms that ephrinB2 has an essential role in early vascular
development. Moreover, we conclude that ephrinB1 expressed in a
partially overlapping domain is unable to compensate for the lack of
ephrinB2, suggesting distinct functions of these two ligands in
cell-to-cell interactions between embryonic endothelial cells.
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The observed expression of EphB2 and EphB3 receptors in yolk sacs, and
of EphB2 and EphB3 in embryonic mesenchyme and endothelial cells,
respectively, prompted us to examine ephB2/ephB3
double-mutant mice (Orioli et al. 1996
) for defects in vascular
remodeling. With 30% penetrance (10 of 32 double mutants), we
recovered double-homozygous embryos with vascular defects. These
mutants showed pale yolk sacs with few blood vessels (Fig. 4C), were
growth retarded compared with their normal littermates and occasionally
had extended pericardial sacs (data not shown). No vascular defects
were observed in single ephB2 or ephB3 homozygotes,
possibly due to very low penetrance. In the embryo, vascular defects
were similar, but not identical to those observed in
ephrinB2
/
mutants. In the
trunk region, dorsal aorta, aortic arches, and large anterior, cardinal
veins are easily recognizable in PECAM-1-stained wild-type embryos
(Fig. 4D). Figure 4E shows a representative ephrinB2
/
mutant embryo, in
which the dorsal aorta primordia had formed normally, whereas the
fourth aortic arch and anterior cardinal vein were abnormal. In more
severe cases of ephrinB2
/
mutants, we observed embryos with one or no dorsal aorta, whereas cardinal veins were always abnormal (Fig. 4F). Severely affected ephB2/ephB3 double homozygotes had abnormally
shaped major vessel primordia (Fig. 4G). Less severely affected embryos
showed normal dorsal aortas and cardinal veins, but lacked a functional
fourth aortic arch that forms the outflow tract of the heart (Fig.
4H,I). Cross sections through this area of the trunk revealed that
endothelial cells had failed to organize into a luminar vessel (Fig.
4J,K). Taken together, these data indicate that a significant
proportion of embryos require EphB2/EphB3 receptors for
proper vascular development. Both
ephrinB2
/
and
ephB2/ephB3 double mutants show a variable
phenotype with respect to the formation of large vessel primordia by
vasculogenesis, suggesting the cooperation of other ligands, possibly
ephrinB1, and receptors, such as EphB4, in this process.
Defective angiogenesis of head, heart, and intersomitic vessels in ephrinB2 and ephB2/ephB3 mutant embryos
At E10, wild-type embryo heads contained a highly organized vascular
system with large diameter branches extending from the anterior
cardinal vein (arrowheads in Fig. 5A) and internal
carotid artery. In contrast,
ephrinB2
/
mutants exhibited a
primitive vasculature with uniformly sized, poorly organized vessels
(Fig. 5B). Likewise, ephB2/ephB3 double homozygotes have fewer, small diameter head vessels (Fig. 5C) or, in
severe cases, were arrested at the primary capillary plexus stage (data
not shown), indicating that angiogenesis had not occurred or was
severely delayed. Whole-mount staining with AP fusion proteins revealed
partially overlapping expression of ephrinB ligands and EphB receptors
in head vessels, including the capillary bed of the head (Fig. 2K,L).
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Normal heart ventricles are filled with numerous myocardial
trabeculations, finger-like projections of the myocardial wall lined by
PECAM-1 positive endocardial cells (Fig. 5D,G). In contrast, ephrinB2
/
and
ephB2/ephB3 mutant hearts were smaller and
contained fewer and less intricately folded trabeculae in heart
ventricles (Fig. 5E,F,H). This phenotype is reminiscent of that seen in
embryos lacking Ang1 (Suri et al. 1996
) or its receptor Tie-2 (Sato et al. 1995
).
In the trunk region of wild-type embryos, intersomitic vessels are
arranged in segments located between somite boundaries. On the dorsal
side, they have been remodeled into a highly arborized capillary network (Fig.
5I). In ephrinB2
/
mutants,
intersomitic vessels showed poor organization and they were less
branched than their counterparts in wild-type embryos (Fig. 5J). In
affected ephB2/ephB3 double homozygotes,
intersomitic vessels were present in the normal segmented pattern.
However, abnormal dorsal branches were observed (arrowhead in Fig. 5K). Similar abnormal branches within somites were revealed in
PECAM-1-stained sections of
ephrinB2
/
mutants (Fig. 5M,
arrows). These results demonstrate a requirement for EphB2 and EphB3 in
heart development and in remodeling of the vasculature of head and somites.
EphrinB ligands induce capillary sprouting in an in vitro sprouting angiogenesis assay
To begin to determine the cellular responses to ephrin signaling in
angiogenesis, we used an in vitro sprouting assay that recapitulates
some aspects of sprouting angiogenesis in vivo (Risau 1997
). This assay
involving adrenal-cortex-derived microvascular endothelial (ACE) cells
on microcarrier (MC) beads has been used to evaluate the sprouting
activity of Ang1 (Koblizek et al. 1998
), which is also required for
vascular remodeling (Suri et al. 1996
). By flow cytometry with
ephrinB-IgG fusion proteins (ephrinB-Fc), the presence of receptors
for ephrinB1 and ephrinB2 was detected on ACE cells (data not shown).
Purified ephrinB1-Fc induced a highly significant increase in the
number of sprouts with a length exceeding the diameter of the bead
(Fig. 6). The sprouting activity of ephrinB1 was
completely blocked with Fc fusions of two of the cognate receptors,
EphB1 and EphB2 (Gale et al. 1996
) (Fig. 6D). No inhibition was
observed in the presence of EphA5-Fc, a member of the A subclass of
Eph receptors that does not bind to ephrinB1. Similar sprouting
activity was associated with ephrinB2-Fc. Interestingly, in this case,
the ligand was only effective when presented in a preclustered form
(Fig. 6E). These results suggest that ephrinB1 and ephrinB2 have
stimulatory influences on capillary sprouting that may be qualitatively
different depending on their degree of clustering, a fact that may be
relevant for their in vivo functions.
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As presented above, the vascular phenotype of ephrinB2 and
EphB2/B3 mutants bear a striking resemblance to
previously characterized mouse mutants of the Tie and Ang family of
RTKs and ligands (Dumont et al. 1994
; Puri et al. 1995
; Sato et al.
1995
; Suri et al. 1996
). Furthermore, our in vitro assay demonstrates
very similar cellular responses of endothelial cells to ligands of both
families, thus raising the possibility that these two signaling systems
may interact in the mediation of this response. We have recently shown
that activated PDGF receptors can rapidly induce ephrinB tyrosine
phosphorylation in cis (Brückner et al. 1997
). Receptors
for Ang1 (Tie-2) and VEGF share structural characteristics with
receptors for PDGF including multiple immunoglobulin-like domains in
their extracellular region and, importantly, a split kinase domain
(Fantl et al. 1993
). Therefore, we asked if there was a similar
biochemical interaction between Tie-2 receptors and ephrinB1. In an in
vitro kinase assay we observed that bacterially expressed GST-Tie2 is
capable of directly phosphorylating the ephrinB1 cytoplasmic domain
(Fig. 6F). These results suggest cross talk between the signaling
pathways triggered by soluble angiogenic factors and by cell-associated ephrinB proteins.
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Discussion |
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A recent report by Wang et al. (1998)
presented a picture in which
ephrinB2 ligands on arteries interact with EphB4 receptors on veins,
and this interaction is required and sufficient for early remodeling of
the embryonic vasculature. Here we describe a much more complex
situation, with two transmembrane ephrinB ligands and three EphB3
receptors expressed in or adjacent to vascular endothelial cells. We
demonstrate that two Eph receptors, EphB2 and EphB3, are critically
required for the remodeling of the embryonic vasculature. Similar to
mice lacking ephrinB2, the angiogenic processes leading to the network
of small and large vessels and requiring sprouting from and pruning of
existing vessels are disrupted in a fraction of
ephB2/ephB3 double mutants. Furthermore, our
expression and phenotypic analyses suggest that ephrin-Eph interactions are not restricted to the arterial-venous boundary, but
occur throughout most of the vasculature, between endothelial cells and
at endothelial-mesenchymal contact zones.
Ephrins regulate capillary sprout formation in vitro
We also provide the first demonstration of a direct response of
endothelial cells to ephrins by showing that soluble ephrinB ligands
induce sprouting behavior by endothelial cells in vitro with comparable
potency to known angiogenic factors such as Ang1 and VEGF. These
findings suggest that ephrins have a stimulatory role in capillary
sprout formation. Alternatively, ephrin-Eph signaling may participate
in the regulation of contact inhibition of endothelial cells.
Exogenously provided ephrinB may relieve cells from contact inhibition,
possibly by increasing cell motility, thereby allowing sprouting to
occur in this assay. The relatively simple assay gave an unexpectedly
complex readout, providing mechanistic insight into ephrin actions on
this cell population. Unclustered ephrinB1 was capable of inducing
capillary sprouts, whereas only preclustered ephrinB2 showed the same
activity. Although it cannot be excluded that a certain level of
spontaneous clustering occurred in some preparations of ephrinB1
chimeras in the absence of clustering antibodies, our findings
correlate well with published experiments on neurons that showed that
unclustered ephrinB1 was active in an in vitro collapse assay.
Moreover, ephrinB2-Fc required preclustering to activate EphB4
receptors (Meima et al. 1997
). The in vivo correlates of these
observations are uncertain. On the one hand, the efficacy of
unclustered ephrinB1 in vitro may imply that this ligand is effective
in vivo even at low expression levels that preclude presentation of
clustered ligand. On the other hand, the requirement for clustered
ephrinB2 in vitro may imply that the presentation of ephrinB2 by cells
in vivo in clustered and unclustered form, for example, because of
different levels of expression or in response to yet-unidentified
molecular signals, could promote qualitatively different responses in
endothelial cells.
Boundary formation between arterial and venous domains
The mechanism of ephrinB and Eph receptor function in vivo is
unclear. The case is complicated, because (1) several different ligands
and receptors are present on endothelial cells and adjacent structures
in at least partially overlapping expression patterns (this report;
Pandey et al. 1995
), (2) ephrinB ligands exhibit largely promiscuous
binding to the various EphB receptors (Flanagan and Vanderhaeghen
1998
), (3) active ligand-receptor complexes require higher order ephrin
clusters (this report; Davis et al. 1994
; Gale and Yancopoulos 1997
;
Stein et al. 1998
), (4) ephrinB ligands and EphB receptors have the
capability to signal bidirectionally (Holland et al. 1996
;
Brückner et al. 1997
). On the basis of the complementary
expression of ephrinB2 on arteries and EphB4 receptors on veins, it has
been proposed that bidirectional signaling by these two molecules is
crucial for the development of the embryonic vasculature (Wang et al.
1998
). By analogy to their known repulsive interactions in the nervous
system, it was suggested that ephrinB2-EphB4 interactions may form a
boundary between arterial and venous domains that simply prevents cell
intermixing (Fig. 7A; Yancopoulos et al. 1998
). It
was suggested that interaction at the boundary may also prevent the
fusion of arterial and venous structures into larger vessels, ensuring
that instead they remodel into a capillary network. This model may in
part be correct, but requires in vitro data showing repulsive
interactions between endothelial cells via ephrin-Eph interactions.
Our demonstration of coexpression of ephrinB1, EphB3, and EphB4 in
veins argues for more complex interactions. A model based on repulsion
would require signaling events mediated by the interaction of ephrinB2
with EphB4 that are distinct from interactions with coexpressed
ephrinB1 and EphB3.
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Ephrin-Eph interactions during vascular morphogenesis
Our in situ hybridization analysis and AP whole-mount stainings, as
well as previously published in vitro observations (Stein et al. 1998
)
indicate that endothelial cells can coexpress ephrin ligands and their
cognate Eph receptors, suggesting that ephrin-Eph signaling
participates in endothelial cell-to-cell communication. The observed
defects in aortic arches of
ephrinB2
/
and
ephB2/ephB3 double mutant embryos suggest such
interactions between ephrinB2, EphB3, and possibly ephrinB1 on
endothelial cells. Coexpression and interaction of ephrinB1, EphB3, and
EphB4 on major vein primordia may be required for remodeling of venous structures. We suggest that cell-to-cell interactions between endothelial cells of the same vessel type via the
ephrin/Eph system result in stimulatory signals that
promote endothelial morphogenesis and sprouting, eventually resulting
in formation of functional vessels (Fig. 7B). The signaling events
triggered in this process may be qualitatively different from signaling
that occurs at the arterial-venous boundary. Ligand clustering and
unidirectional versus bidirectional signaling could provide the
molecular bases for this difference in signaling.
Interactions between endothelial and mesenchymal cells
An additional potential site of ephrin-Eph interaction is at the
endothelial-mesenchymal interface (Fig. 7C). We observed mesenchymal
cells of the dermomyotome expressing ephrinB2 to be in close contact
with intersomitic vessels that express EphB3 and EphB4 receptors. This
expression is of functional relevance for vascular remodeling, because
it is correlated with a reduction of the intersomitic capillary bed of
ephrinB2
/
and
ephB2/ephB3 double mutants. Moreover, during
somitogenesis, ephrinB2 is expressed in the caudal half of the somites
(see Fig. 3B; Wang and Anderson 1997
) and may participate in the
segmental organization of intersomitic vessels. Consistent with this
hypothesis, we found defective segmental arrangement of intersomitic
vessels in ephrinB2
/
mutants
and abnormal sprouts penetrating the somites in
ephB2/ephB3 mutants. On the basis of these
phenotypes, we speculate that the nature of the interaction of somitic
ephrinB2 with endothelial EphB receptors may be to suppress sprouts,
which are therefore seen in the mutants. Consequently, EphB3 and EphB4
receptors would have cell autonomous functions in this structure,
whereas mesenchymal ephrinB2 may function as a ligand for these
receptors. The reciprocal situation was observed in the umbilical vein,
in which EphB2-expressing mesenchymal cells were in close contact with
PECAM-1 positive endothelial cells expressing the ligand ephrinB1.
Although we did not find any obvious defects in this structure in
ephB2/ephB3 mutant homozygotes, perhaps because
of functional redundancy with other EphB receptors or the result of low
penetrance, we speculate that Eph receptors expressed by cells adjacent
to endothelial cells may serve as ligands for endothelial ephrins,
which would engage in reverse signaling much the same as has been
proposed for anterior commissure neurons (Henkemeyer et al. 1996
;
Orioli et al. 1996
).
Mesenchymal cells are also the source of angiogenic factors such as
VEGF and Ang1, the latter being required for remodeling of the
embryonic vasculature. How might these two signaling systems interact
in the developing vasculature? EphrinB-EphB interactions may regulate
the expression of Ang1 or its receptors Tie-2 and Tie-1. However, our
preliminary RT-PCR expression analysis indicates the presence of
Ang1, Tie-2, and Tie-1 mRNA transcripts in
ephrinB2
/
mutants (data not
shown). Alternatively, Ang1 and VEGF may regulate ephrinB-EphB
signaling. Consistent with this hypothesis, we show that Tie-2 can
directly phosphorylate the cytoplasmic domain of ephrinB2 at least in
vitro. Although in vivo data are not yet available, it is possible that
one of the actions of Ang1 is to activate ephrin-Eph signaling by
inducing tyrosine phosphorylation and reverse signaling by ephrins.
Whatever the mechanism, we suggest that mesenchymal cells interact with
endothelial cells both through secreted factors and by cell-to-cell
signaling via the ephrinB-EphB system (Fig. 7C).
Angiogenesis in the nervous system
Vascular development of the nervous system involves angiogenic
sprouting from adjacent vessels into neuroectodermal tissue and may be
mediated by similar mechanisms such as endothelial-mesenchymal interactions. Interestingly, angiogenic sprouting into the nervous system is disrupted in
ephrinB2
/
homozygotes (data
not shown; Wang et al. 1998
). Those workers suggested that ephrinB2
ligand signaling was required in arterial endothelial cells after
interaction with EphB2-expressing cells in the neural tube. However, we
did not observe defects in neural tube vascularization in
ephB2/ephB3 double knockout embryos (data not
shown). This may be due to overlapping expression and functional compensation by other EphB receptors such as EphB1 in the nervous system. Alternatively, it is possible that ephrinB2 expressed at
various levels of the neural tube provides a sprout-inducing signal to
EphB3/EphB4-expressing venous endothelial cells, thereby stimulating capillary ingrowth into the neural tube. Analysis of
conditional mutant mice lacking ephrinB ligands in the nervous system
will hopefully clarify this issue.
Signaling events induced by ephrin-Eph interactions
Some evidence suggests that the vascular phenotype observed in the
two classes of mutant embryos presented here is at least in part due to
interference with EphB receptor signaling. Our in vitro data show an
induction of sprouting by soluble (clustered) ephrins, demonstrating a
direct role of EphB receptors in mediating this response, which mimics
some aspects of vascular remodeling in vivo. Activated EphB receptors
are known to bind to the Ras GTPase activating protein, RasGAP (Holland
et al. 1997
), which in turn recruits other signaling molecules that may
eventually mediate cellular responses such as changes in actin
polymerization and cell shape (Brückner and Klein 1998
).
Interestingly, mice lacking RasGAP show vascular remodeling defects
similiar to the phenotypes of the mice described here (Henkemeyer et
al. 1995
), raising the possibility that RasGAP mediates EphB receptor
signaling in endothelial cells.
Reverse signaling by ephrinB ligands may also contribute to the
phenotype of the mice described here. The vascular remodeling deficit
observed in ephB2/ephB3 double-mutant mice must
at least partially reflect outside-in signaling into endothelial cells, because EphB2 expression is not observed on vessels. Functional redundancy between mesenchymal EphB2 and endothelial EphB3 receptors may be due to interaction with endothelial ephrinB1, whose main function may be that of a receptor. Little is known about signaling events downstream of ephrins. Activated ephrinB ligands are
phosphorylated on tyrosine, thus, initiating phosphotyrosine-mediated
signaling, and at the same time are inhibitory for signaling by
activated receptor tyrosine kinases expressed in the same cell
(Brückner et al. 1997
). This suggests that ephrinB signaling in
endothelial cells could participate in cross talk with the many
receptor tyrosine kinases known to be essential for vasculogenesis and
angiogenesis (Risau 1997
).
Future directions
Ephrins and Eph receptors have been found to be expressed on a
variety of solid tumors and in tumor cell lines (Brambilla and Klein
1995
). Our observations that null mutations in these gene families
result in defects in vascular remodeling raise the possibility that
blocking ephrin-Eph receptor interaction could interfere with
neovascularization of tumor tissue and consequently tumor growth.
Conditional mutants lacking ephrins or Eph receptors in adulthood may
be important tools to demonstrate a requirement for these molecules in
pathological angiogenesis.
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Materials and methods |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Targeting vector and generation of mutant mice
The replacement-type targeting vector pRA62 consisted of 11.7 kb of
ephrinB2 genomic sequences (10.5 kb in the long arm and 1.2 kb
in the short arm), a PGK driven neo cassette flanked by loxP
sites and a lacZ gene fused to the transmembrane domain of mouse trkB [pJP68; position 422-460 in the trkB
cDNA (Klein et al. 1989
)], inserted 5 amino acids downstream of the
presumptive signal peptide of ephrinB2 [nucleotide position 87 in the
mouse ephrinB2 cDNA (Bergemann et al. 1995
)]. Cell culture,
electroporation of R1 ES cells, selection with G418, and blastocyst
injections were carried out according to standard protocols. RT-PCR
analysis was performed on early embryos and confirmed the absence of
ephrinB2 mRNA in
ephrinB2
/
mutants (data not
shown). Heterozygous offspring showed no overt phenotype, but no
ephrinB2
/
mutants were born
following intercrosses of heterozygous females and males, indicating
a recessive lethal phenotype. The number of heterozygotes born was
reduced by half (data not shown) suggesting a dose-dependent
embryonic requirement for ephrinB2. Mutant phenotypes were analyzed
with essentially the same results in
129/svev × C57Bl/6 and
129/svev × CD1 mixed genetic backgrounds. EphB2
(Nuk) and EphB3 (Sek4) mutant mice have been described (Henkemeyer et al. 1996
; Orioli et al. 1996
). The described defects were observed in
ephB2null/lacZ;ephB3
/
mutants in a C57Bl/6 background.
RT-PCR analysis mRNA was extracted from wild-type yolk sacs and embryos by standard procedures and subjected to reverse transcription with oligo(dT)15 primers and PCR amplification. To detect expression of various ephrin/eph genes, the following primer pairs were used: ephrinB2, 5'-CTGTGCCAGACCAGACCAAGA-3' (sense), 5'-CAGCAGAACTTGCATCTTGTC-3' (antisense); ephrin-B1, 5'-AAGCCACACCAGGAAATCCGC-3' (sense), 5'-CGGTGCCCGCTGTACCACTAC-3' (antisense); ephB2, 5'-ATGCCCTTCTCCACCCTCTCC-3' (sense), 5'-TCTCCTAGTTATGAGTTCTAC-3' (antisense); ephB3, 5'-GCTGGTGAGTTTGGGGAAGTG-3' (sense), 5'-GTGACCCCAATCCTTAGCAG-3' (antisense); ephB4, 5'-CAGGTGGTCAGCGCTCTGGAC-3' (sense), 5'-ATCTGCCACGGTGGTGAGTCC-3' (antisense).
Whole-mount immunohistochemistry
Wild-type and mutant embryos were isolated, fixed, and stained with a rat antibody against PECAM-1 (Pharmingen 1:100 dilution) and secondary antibodies against rat IgG, and avidin-conjugated peroxidase (Vector) according to published protocols. For double immunohistochemistry, embryos were fixed, bleached with 5% H2O2 in methanol for 5 hr, blocked with 3% instant skim milk powder, 0.1% Triton X-100 in PBS for 2 hr, and simultaneously incubated with primary antibodies against PECAM-1 (Pharmingen, 1:100) and ephrinB2 (Santa Cruz, 1:50) in blocking solution at 4°C overnight. After extensive washes in blocking solution, embryos were again fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde for 2 hr, washed in PBS, and incubated at 65°C for 30 min to inactivate endogenous phosphatases. An additional blocking for 2 hr was then followed by incubation with secondary antibodies (biotinylated anti-rat IgG, Vector, 1:100; anti-rabbit IgG alkaline phosphatase conjugated, Sigma, 1:100) as before. Finally, embryos were extensively washed, stained by alkaline phosphatase reaction, incubated with avidin-conjugated peroxidase (Vector) overnight, again washed in blocking buffer, and developed in 3,3'-diaminobenzidinetetrahydrochloride (DAB).
Whole-mount staining with alkaline phosphate fusion proteins
Embryos and yolk sacs of wild-type embryos (CD1) were dissected,
treated with Dent's fixative (20% DMSO, 80% methanol) for 30 min at
room temperature, washed three times with PBS (5 min each), and
incubated with fusion proteins (10 nM) of Eph receptors or
ephrins and human-secreted alkaline phosphatase (Brambilla et al. 1995
)
in DMEM, 10% calf serum, 0.1% NaN3. Washing, heat inactivation of phosphatases, and color development was performed as
described previously (Cheng and Flanagan 1994
).
Whole-mount in situ hybridization
In situ hybridizations were performed as described (Haramis et al.
1995
) with unbleached E9.5 embryos treated with proteinase K for 15 min. Probes were used as follows: Flk-1 (Millauer et al.
1993
); ephrinB1, a 1.1-kb fragment corresponding to the
full-length coding region (Bouillet et al. 1995
); ephrinB2, a
890-bp fragment extending from nucleotide 4 to 894 (Bergemann et al.
1995
); ephB3 (Orioli et al. 1996
); ephB4, a 1146-bp
fragment extending from nucleotide 104 to 1250 (Ciossek et al. 1995
);
lacZ, a 2.2-kb fragment encoding the carboxy-terminal 790 amino acids of
galactosidase.
In vitro sprouting angiogenesis assay
The assay and generation of Ang1* was described (Koblizek et al.
1998
). Purifed Fc fusion proteins were described previously (Davis et
al. 1994
; Gale et al. 1996
). Clustering of ephrinB2-Fc was done as
described (Wang and Anderson 1997
).
In vitro kinase assay
Fusion proteins of GST and mouse Tie2 cytoplasmic domain
(GST-Tie2), human ephrinB1 (GST-ephrinB1) extracellular or
cytoplasmic domain were expressed in bacterial strain XL1-blue and
purified according to standard protocols. GST-Tie2 or GST (200-300
ng) control were incubated together with similiar amounts of
GST-ephrinB1 substrates in 20 mM HEPES (pH 7.2), 10 mM MnCl2, 1 mM DTT, 5 µM ATP, 185 kBq [
-32P]ATP (Amersham), 100 nM
sodium orthovanadate, 1× complete protease inhibitor cocktail
(Boehringer Mannheim) for 20 min at 37°C. After separation of
proteins by electrophoresis in a 10% SDS-polyacrylamide gel, the
vacuum-dried gel was exposed to X-ray film (Kodak X-OMAT AR) for 36 hr.
| |
Acknowledgments |
|---|
We thank A. Plück-Becklas and coworkers of the European Molecular Biology Laboratory Transgenic Core Facility for the generation of chimeric mice, the staff of the animal house for expert support, K. McNagny, S. Adams, and M. Schorpp-Kistner for help in the initial characterization of the phenotype, G. Yancopoulos for suggesting in vitro sprouting assays. Purified recombinant VEGF was a gift from M. Clauss. We are thankful to T. Graf and K. Kullander for critically reading the manuscript. Support for this study came in part from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, Kl948/2-1), from the Human Frontier Science Program Organization, from a European Union Biotechnology network grant to R.K, and from the Deutsche Krebshilfe and the Max Planck Society to C.W., U.D., and W.R. R.H.A. was supported by an European Molecular Biology Organization postdoctoral fellowship.
The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked `advertisement' in accordance with 18 USC section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
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Footnotes |
|---|
Received August 7, 1998; revised version accepted December 9, 1998.
4 In memoriam: Werner Risau (Dec. 18, 1953-Dec. 13, 1998).
5 Corresponding author.
E-MAIL klein{at}embl-heidelberg.de; FAX 49-6221-387 516 or 306.
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References |
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