Objective
Adhesive ligand-receptor interactions play key roles in blood vessel angiogenesis but remain poorly characterized during lymphatic vessel growth. In this study we use genetic approaches in both fish and mice to address the roles of cell surface integrin ligand VCAM and its two receptors, integrins a9 and a4, during lymphatic vascular development.
Approach and Results
Conditional deletion of the Vcam gene was used to test VCAM function in lymphatic growth in mid-gestation mice. Morpholino knockdown and cRNA rescue of the two zebrafish vcam alleles as well as integrins a9 and 4 were used to test the role of these ligands and receptors during lymphatic growth in the developing fish. We show that VCAM is essential for lymphatic development in the zebrafish embryo, and that integrin alpha9 (Itga9) rather than Itga4 is the required VCAM receptor in the developing fish. VCAM is expressed along lines of lymphatic migration in the mouse intestine, but its loss only retards lymphatic growth.
Conclusions
These studies reveal an unexpected role for cell-cell adhesion mediated by Itga9-VCAM interaction during lymphatic development in the fish but not in the mouse. We propose that the relative importance of cellular adhesive ligands is magnified under conditions of rapid tissue growth when cell number increases faster than cell matrix, such as in the early zebrafish embryo.