The mechanisms of blood vessel maturation into distinct parts of the blood vasculature such as arteries, veins, and capillaries have been the subject of intense investigation over recent years. In contrast, our knowledge of lymphatic vessel maturation is still fragmentary. In this study, we provide a molecular and morphological characterization of the major steps in the maturation of the primary lymphatic capillary plexus into collecting lymphatic vessels during development and show that forkhead transcription factor Foxc2 controls this process. We further identify transcription factor NFATc1 as a novel regulator of lymphatic development and describe a previously unsuspected link between NFATc1 and Foxc2 in the regulation of lymphatic maturation. We also provide a genome-wide map of FOXC2-binding sites in lymphatic endothelial cells, identify a novel consensus FOXC2 sequence, and show that NFATc1 physically interacts with FOXC2-binding enhancers. As damage to collecting vessels is a major cause of lymphatic dysfunction in humans, our results suggest that FOXC2 and NFATc1 are potential targets for therapeutic intervention.
Vascular endothelial growth factor receptor-3 (VEGFR-3) is essential for embryonic cardiovascular development, but thereafter becomes confined to the lymphatic endothelium in adult tissues. We have here studied VEGFR-3 expression in experimental wounds of pigs and chronic inflammatory wounds of humans. In healing incisional and punch biopsy wounds made in the dorsal skin of pigs, angiogenic blood vessels, identified by use of the blood vascular endothelial markers vWF and PAL-E and the basal lamina protein laminin, developed into the granulation tissue stroma from day 4 onward, being most abundant on days 5 and 6 and regressing thereafter. VEGFR-3-positive vessels were observed in the granulation tissue from day 5 onward. These vessels were distinct from the PAL-E/laminin/vWF-positive vessels and fewer in number, and they appeared to sprout from pre-existing VEGFR-3-positive lymphatic vessels at the wound edge. Unlike the blood vessels, very few VEGFR-3-positive lymphatic vessels persisted on day 9 and none on day 14. In chronic wounds such as ulcers and decubitus wounds of the lower extremity of humans, VEGFR-3 was also weakly expressed in the vascular endothelium. Our results suggest that transient lymphangiogenesis occurs in parallel with angiogenesis in healing wounds and that VEGFR-3 becomes up-regulated in blood vessel endothelium in chronic inflammatory wounds. Angiogenesis, the formation of new blood vessels from pre-existing ones, is essential in many physiological processes such as embryonic development, tissue and organ regeneration, the female reproductive cycle, and wound healing and inflammation.
The Drosophila transcription factor Prospero functions as a tumor suppressor, and it has been suggested that the human counterpart of Prospero, PROX1, acts similarly in human cancers. However, we show here that PROX1 promotes dysplasia in colonic adenomas and colorectal cancer progression. PROX1 expression marks the transition from benign colon adenoma to carcinoma in situ, and its loss inhibits growth of human colorectal tumor xenografts and intestinal adenomas in Apc(min/+) mice, while its transgenic overexpression promotes colorectal tumorigenesis. Furthermore, in intestinal tumors PROX1 is a direct and dose-dependent target of the beta-catenin/TCF signaling pathway, responsible for the neoplastic transformation. Our data underscore the complexity of cancer pathogenesis and implicate PROX1 in malignant tumor progression through the regulation of cell polarity and adhesion.
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