Abstract
Recent observations have shown that Drm, a member the Dan family of bone morphogenic protein (BMP) antagonists, induces endothelial cell (EC) sprouting in vitro and angiogenesis in vivo by interacting with signaling EC receptors in a BMP-independent manner. Here, recombinant Drm (rDrm) up-regulates angiopoientin-1 (Ang-1) expression in EC without affecting Ang-2 and Tie-2 receptor expression. Ang-1 up-regulation is mediated by the activation of the transcription factor NF-κB. Specific inhibition of Ang-1 activity by anti–Ang-1 antibodies, soluble Tie-2 receptor, or Ang-1 siRNA transfection significantly reduced the rDrm-mediated sprouting of EC in three-dimensional fibrin and type I collagen gels. In addition, Ang-1 antagonists inhibited the angiogenic activity exerted by rDrm in the chick embryo chorioallantoic membrane. Taken together, the data indicate that the proangiogenic activity of Drm is mediated by the activation of an Ang-1–dependent autocrine loop of stimulation in EC.
Introduction
The angiopoietin/Tie receptor system, which consists of 4 angiopoietin (Ang) ligands and the Tie-1 and Tie-2 receptors, plays a nonredundant role in embryonic vascularization and tumor angiogenesis.1,2 An autocrine Ang-1/Tie-2 axis modulates blood vessel plasticity and contributes to vascular maintenance. Accordingly, Ang-1 enhances survival, migration, and network formation of endothelial cells (ECs) in vitro3 and induces neovascularization in vivo.4,5
Drm, a member the Dan family of bone morphogenic protein (BMP) antagonists,6,7 interacts with signaling EC receptors in a BMP-independent manner.8 The productive interaction stimulates EC sprouting and migration in vitro and induces angiogenesis in vivo.8 Drm is overexpressed in human cancers by tumor and stromal cells, thus suggesting that Drm may contribute to tumor neovascularization.8-10
Here, we investigated the role of the Ang/Tie-2 system in mediating the angiogenic activity of Drm. The results demonstrate that Drm up-regulates Ang-1 expression in EC via activation of the transcription factor NF-κB. This leads to an autocrine loop of stimulation that mediates Drm-induced EC sprouting in vitro and angiogenesis in vivo.
Methods
Cell cultures
Approval for these studies was obtained from the Ethical Committee of the School of Medicine of the University of Brescia. Subcutaneous murine microvascular EC (SIE cells) and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) receptor-2–transduced murine aortic EC (VEGFR2-MAE cells) were cultured in DMEM supplemented with 10% calf serum (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA). Human umbilical vein ECs (HUVECs) were grown as described.11 ECs were transfected (70%-80% efficiency) with siRNAs using the SiRNA Transfection Reagent (Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Santa Cruz, CA) according to the manufacturer's instructions.
Western blotting
Western blotting was performed according to standard procedures on the conditioned media (0.5 mL), total cell lysates (20 μg), nuclear extracts (5 μg), and cytoplasmic fractions (10 μg) from serum-starved EC cultures stimulated with 50 ng/mL of recombinant Drm (rDrm, R&D Systems, Minneapolis, MN).
Electrophoretic mobility shift assay
Nuclear extracts (2 μg) were incubated with biotin-labeled NF-κB double-stranded DNA oligonucleotide probe (5′-AGTTGAGGGGACTTTCCCAGGC) according to LightShift Chemiluminescent EMSA Kit instructions (Pierce, Rockford, IL) and analyzed on a native 6% polyacrylamide gel.
EC sprouting
Artery ring assay
One-millimeter human umbilical artery rings were embedded in fibrin gel14 and cultured in human EC medium SFM (Invitrogen) with different stimuli. After 3 days, EC sprouts were counted under an inverted microscope at ×10 magnification.
Gene expression analysis
cDNA was generated from total RNA using the MMLV-RT kit (Invitrogen). Reverse-transcribed polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) was performed using murine specific primers for Ang-1 (NM_009640: 5′-TCATGCTAACAGGAGGTTGGT-3′; 5′-ATGGTGGTGGAACGTAAGGA-3′); Ang-2 (NM_007426: 5′-TCGGGAGCCCTCTGGGAGAGTACT-3′; 5′-AGCGAATGCGCCTCGTTGC-3′); β-actin (NM_009073: 5′-CGTAAAGACCTCTATGCCAACA-3′; 5′-CCACCGATCCACACAGAGTA-3′).
Chick embryo chorioallantoic membrane assay
Alginate beads (5 μL) containing vehicle, rDrm (100 ng/embryo), parental or Drm-overexpressing COS cells8 (10 000 cells/embryo) were placed on the chorioallantoic membrane (CAM) of fertilized White Leghorn chicken eggs at day 11 of incubation.15 After 72 hours, new blood vessels converging toward the implant were counted under a stereomicroscope at ×5 magnification.16
Results and discussion
Steady-state levels of Ang-1, Ang-2, Tie-2, and VEGF-A transcripts were evaluated in rDrm-treated SIE cells by RT-PCR analysis. Within 2 hours, rDrm causes the up-regulation of Ang-1 expression without affecting the expression of Ang-2 (Figure 1A) or of Tie-2 and VEGF-A (data not shown). Accordingly, Western blot analysis of rDrm-treated EC extracts demonstrates an increase in the levels of cell-associated Ang-1 protein at 18 hours after stimulation (Figure 1B). The effect was dose-dependent, maximal stimulation occurring at 50 ng/mL of rDrm (data not shown). Secreted Ang-1 induces Tie-2 phosphorylation in SIEC cells (Figure 1F) that was prevented by neutralizing anti–Ang-1 antibodies (Figure S1, available on the Blood website; see the Supplemental Materials link at the top of the online article), pointing to an Ang-1/Tie-2 autocrine loop of stimulation in Drm-activated ECs.
Proangiogenic cytokines and growth factors cause the activation of the transcription factor NF-κB.17 Immunofluorescence and Western blot analysis demonstrate the rapid nuclear translocation of the NF-κB RelA/p65 subunit in rDrm-treated ECs paralleled by the degradation of the NF-κB inhibitor IKBα (Figure 1C,D). Electrophoretic mobility shift assay (EMSA) of the nuclear extracts with a NF-κB double-stranded DNA oligonucleotide probe revealed an increase in the formation of protein-DNA complexes 20 minutes after rDrm stimulation (Figure 1E). Complex formation was prevented by an excess of unlabeled NF-κB probe but not of a mutant NF-κB probe and the presence of RelA/p65 in the complex(es) was confirmed by EMSA supershifting (Figure S2).
NF-κB activation may cause Ang-1 induction.18 Accordingly, inhibition of NF-κB activity by the NF-κB nuclear translocation inhibitor SN50 or by the IkBα phosphorylation inhibitor BAY 11-7085 abrogates rDrm-mediated Ang-1 up-regulation and release in SIE cells, thus preventing Tie-2 phosphorylation (Figure 1F). Accordingly, RelA/p65 down-modulation by siRNA transfection inhibits Ang-1 up-regulation (Figure S3). These data demonstrate that Ang-1 induction by rDrm in EC is mediated, at least in part, by NF-κB activation.
Drm stimulates EC sprouting and invasive activity.8 Ang-1 siRNA transfection, which suppresses Ang-1 up-regulation in rDrm-treated cells, prevents rDrm-mediated sprouting of murine EC aggregates in fibrin gel (Figure 2A) without affecting cell survival and serum-dependent proliferation (data not shown). No inhibition was instead exerted by Ang-1 siRNA on human Ang-1–transfected ECs either in the absence or in the presence of rDrm treatment (Figure S4). Similar to Ang-1 siRNA transfection, neutralizing anti–Ang-1 antibodies affected rDrm-mediated EC sprouting (Figure 2A). In addition, a soluble Tie-2 receptor (sTie-2) inhibited rDrm-mediated invasion of type I collagen matrix by HUVEC spheroids without affecting Ang-1 up-regulation, as shown by Ang-1 immunostaining (Figure 2B). Moreover, anti–Ang-1 antibodies and sTie-2 abrogate the capacity of rDrm to induce EC sprouting from fibrin-embedded human umbilical artery rings (Figures 2C, S5A). Accordingly, anti–Ang-1 antibodies prevent EC sprouting in a murine aorta ring assay (data not shown). Finally, the 2 Ang-1 antagonists significantly inhibit the angiogenic response triggered in vivo by rDrm or by Drm-overexpressing COS cells8 on the chick embryo CAM (Figures 2D, S5B).
Vascular homeostasis is controlled by a balanced Tie-2 signaling.2 Ang-1 is constitutively expressed at low levels in adult vasculature.2 However, proangiogenic stimuli, including nitric oxide, hypoxia, TNFα, and VEGF, cause Ang-1 up-regulation.18-20 In addition, Ang-1 triggers neovascularization in vivo4,5 and modulates EC sprouting and vascular network formation in vitro.3 Here, we demonstrate the capacity of the proangiogenic factor Drm to increase Ang-1 production in murine and human ECs. Ang-1 up-regulation plays a nonredundant role in the angiogenic process triggered by Drm. Indeed, inhibition of the Ang-1/Tie-2 autocrine loop of stimulation by Ang-1 antagonists or by siRNA transfection hampers Drm-mediated EC sprouting in vitro and angiogenesis in vivo. Interestingly, Ang-1 antagonists cause also an approximately 50% inhibition of the angiogenic response triggered by VEGF-A or fibroblast growth factor-2 in the CAM assay (S. M., unpublished observations, January 2008), indicating that activation of the Ang-1/Tie-2 system may represent a common step in the angiogenic process.
Drm-induced Ang-1 up-regulation in EC is mediated, at least in part, by activation of NF-κB. NF-κB triggers a proinflammatory/proangiogenic transcription program in endothelium and regulates the production of various angiogenic factors.17 Accordingly, various NF-κB-modulated chemokines (ie, CCL2, CCL7, CXCL1, and CXCL2) and cell adhesion molecules (ie, ICAM1 and VCAM1) are up-regulated in rDrm-treated SIE cells in addition to Ang-1 (G.A., unpublished observations, September 2007). Interestingly, Ang-1 exerts anti-inflammatory effects.2 NF-κB-mediated Ang-1 up-regulation by Drm may represent a negative feedback mechanism of control of the inflammatory response during angiogenesis.
The online version of this article contains a data supplement.
The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by page charge payment. Therefore, and solely to indicate this fact, this article is hereby marked “advertisement” in accordance with 18 USC section 1734.
Acknowledgments
The authors thank F. Bussolino and L. Napione (IRCC Institute, Candiolo, Turin, Italy) for having provided the pcDNA3-human Ang-1 expression plasmid.
This work was supported by grants from Istituto Superiore di Sanità (Oncotechnological Program, Rome, Italy), Ministero dell'Istruzione, Università e Ricerca (Centro di Eccellenza per l'Innovazione Diagnostica e Terapeutica, Cofin projects, Rome, Italy), Associazione Italiana per la Ricerca sul Cancro (Milan, Italy), Fondazione Berlucchi (Brescia, Italy), and NOBEL Project Cariplo (Milan, Italy; M.P.).
Authorship
Contribution: S.M., E.M., G.A., and M.P. designed research; S.M., E.M., C.R., G.A., and M.B. performed research; S.M., E.M., and M.P. analyzed data and wrote the paper.
Conflict-of-interest disclosure: The authors declare no competing financial interests.
Correspondence: Marco Presta, General Pathology, Department of Biomedical Sciences and Biotechnology, University of Brescia, Viale Europa 11, 25123 Brescia, Italy; e-mail: presta@med.unibs.it.
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