Expression of VEGF receptors on endothelial cells in mouse skeletal muscle.

VEGFR surface localization plays a critical role in converting extracellular VEGF signaling towards angiogenic outcomes, and the quantitative characterization of these parameters is critical for advancing computational models; however the levels of these receptors on blood vessels is currently unkno...

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Main Authors: Princess I Imoukhuede, Aleksander S Popel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3440347?pdf=render
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author Princess I Imoukhuede
Aleksander S Popel
author_facet Princess I Imoukhuede
Aleksander S Popel
author_sort Princess I Imoukhuede
collection DOAJ
description VEGFR surface localization plays a critical role in converting extracellular VEGF signaling towards angiogenic outcomes, and the quantitative characterization of these parameters is critical for advancing computational models; however the levels of these receptors on blood vessels is currently unknown. Therefore our aim is to quantitatively determine the VEGFR localization on endothelial cells from mouse hindlimb skeletal muscles. We contextualize this VEGFR quantification through comparison to VEGFR-levels on cells in vitro. Using quantitative fluorescence we measure and compare the levels of VEGFR1 and VEGFR2 on endothelial cells isolated from C57BL/6 and BALB/c gastrocnemius and tibialis anterior hindlimb muscles. Fluorescence measurements are calibrated using beads with known numbers of phycoerythrin molecules. The data show a 2-fold higher VEGFR1 surface localization relative to VEGFR2 with 2,000-3,700 VEGFR1/endothelial cell and 1,300-2,000 VEGFR2/endothelial cell. We determine that endothelial cells from the highly glycolytic muscle, tibialis anterior, contain 30% higher number of VEGFR1 surface receptors than gastrocnemius; BALB/c mice display ~17% higher number of VEGFR1 than C57BL/6. When we compare these results to mouse fibroblasts in vitro, we observe high levels of VEGFR1 (35,800/cell) and very low levels of VEGFR2 (700/cell), while in human endothelial cells in vitro, we observe that the balance of VEGFRs is inverted, with higher levels VEGFR2 (5,800/cell) and lower levels of VEGFR1 (1,800/cell). Our studies also reveal significant cell-to-cell heterogeneity in receptor expression, and the quantification of these dissimilarities ex vivo for the first time provides insight into the balance of anti-angiogenic or modulatory (VEGFR1) and pro-angiogenic (VEGFR2) signaling.
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spelling doaj.art-dba1c93a3a1840f79be6d99da6925e5d2022-12-22T02:02:38ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-0179e4479110.1371/journal.pone.0044791Expression of VEGF receptors on endothelial cells in mouse skeletal muscle.Princess I ImoukhuedeAleksander S PopelVEGFR surface localization plays a critical role in converting extracellular VEGF signaling towards angiogenic outcomes, and the quantitative characterization of these parameters is critical for advancing computational models; however the levels of these receptors on blood vessels is currently unknown. Therefore our aim is to quantitatively determine the VEGFR localization on endothelial cells from mouse hindlimb skeletal muscles. We contextualize this VEGFR quantification through comparison to VEGFR-levels on cells in vitro. Using quantitative fluorescence we measure and compare the levels of VEGFR1 and VEGFR2 on endothelial cells isolated from C57BL/6 and BALB/c gastrocnemius and tibialis anterior hindlimb muscles. Fluorescence measurements are calibrated using beads with known numbers of phycoerythrin molecules. The data show a 2-fold higher VEGFR1 surface localization relative to VEGFR2 with 2,000-3,700 VEGFR1/endothelial cell and 1,300-2,000 VEGFR2/endothelial cell. We determine that endothelial cells from the highly glycolytic muscle, tibialis anterior, contain 30% higher number of VEGFR1 surface receptors than gastrocnemius; BALB/c mice display ~17% higher number of VEGFR1 than C57BL/6. When we compare these results to mouse fibroblasts in vitro, we observe high levels of VEGFR1 (35,800/cell) and very low levels of VEGFR2 (700/cell), while in human endothelial cells in vitro, we observe that the balance of VEGFRs is inverted, with higher levels VEGFR2 (5,800/cell) and lower levels of VEGFR1 (1,800/cell). Our studies also reveal significant cell-to-cell heterogeneity in receptor expression, and the quantification of these dissimilarities ex vivo for the first time provides insight into the balance of anti-angiogenic or modulatory (VEGFR1) and pro-angiogenic (VEGFR2) signaling.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3440347?pdf=render
spellingShingle Princess I Imoukhuede
Aleksander S Popel
Expression of VEGF receptors on endothelial cells in mouse skeletal muscle.
PLoS ONE
title Expression of VEGF receptors on endothelial cells in mouse skeletal muscle.
title_full Expression of VEGF receptors on endothelial cells in mouse skeletal muscle.
title_fullStr Expression of VEGF receptors on endothelial cells in mouse skeletal muscle.
title_full_unstemmed Expression of VEGF receptors on endothelial cells in mouse skeletal muscle.
title_short Expression of VEGF receptors on endothelial cells in mouse skeletal muscle.
title_sort expression of vegf receptors on endothelial cells in mouse skeletal muscle
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3440347?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT princessiimoukhuede expressionofvegfreceptorsonendothelialcellsinmouseskeletalmuscle
AT aleksanderspopel expressionofvegfreceptorsonendothelialcellsinmouseskeletalmuscle