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Yuxi Feng1; Franziska vom Hagen1; Yumei Wang1; Susanne Beck2; Kay Schreiter3; Frederick Pfister1; Sigrid Hoffmann4; Patrick Wagner5; Mathias Seeliger2; Grietje Molema6; Urban Deutsch7; Hans-Peter Hammes1
15th Medical Clinic, Medical Faculty Mannheim, University of Heidelberg, Mannheim, Germany; 2Retinal Electrodiagnostics Research Group, University of Tuebingen, Tuebingen, Germany; 3DeveloGen AG, Göttingen, Germany; 4Medical Research Center, Medical Faculty Mannheim, University of Heidelberg, Mannheim, Germany; 5Max-Planck-Institute for Physiological and Clinical Research, Bad Nauheim, Germany; 6Laboratory for Endothelial Biomedicine and Vascular Drug Targeting Research, Medical Biology Section, Department Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University Medical Center Groningen, University of Groningen, Groningen, Netherlands; 7Max-Planck-Institute for Vascular Biology, c/o Institute of Cell Biology, ZMBE, University of Muenster, and Theodor-Kocher-Institute, Berne, Switzerland
Angiopoietin-2 (Ang-2) antagonises the maturing effect of angiopoietin- 1 (Ang-1) on blood vessels, and cooperates with VEGF to induce neovascularisation. In knockout mice, Ang-2 displayed a specific role in postnatal angiogenic remodelling. Here, we demonstrate that mice deficient in Ang-2 fail to form a proper spatial retinal vascular network. The retinal vasculature was characterised by reduced large vessel numbers and defects forming the superficial periphery mostly on the arteriolar site, and the secondary and tertiary deep capillary network. Hypoxia in the retinal periphery induced a four-fold VEGF upregulation and active endothelial proliferation for up to 60 days. Concomitantly, retinal digest preparations showed increased arteriolar (+33%) and capillary diameters (+90%), and fluorescein angiograms revealed leakiness of neovascular front. At one year of age, persistent preretinal vessels were non-leaky in accordance with a relative increase in the ratio of Ang-1 to VEGF. Taken together, the data suggest that Ang-2 has an important function in the spatial configuration of the three-dimensional retinal vasculature. Secondarily, prolonged VEGF activity results in a model of persistent proliferative retinopathy.
angiogenesis, VEGF, angiopoietin, proliferative retinopathy
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