Strobel Hannah A, LaBelle Steven A, Krishnan Laxminarayanan, Dale Jacob, Rauff Adam, Poulson A Marsh, Bader Nathan, Beare Jason E, Aliaj Klevis, Weiss Jeffrey A, Hoying James B
Advanced Solutions Life Sciences, Manchester, NH, United States.
Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, United States.
Front Physiol. 2020 Aug 14;11:1026. doi: 10.3389/fphys.2020.01026. eCollection 2020.
Vascular connectivity between adjacent vessel beds within and between tissue compartments is essential to any successful neovascularization process. To establish new connections, growing neovessels must locate other vascular elements during angiogenesis, often crossing matrix and other tissue-associated boundaries and interfaces. How growing neovessels traverse any tissue interface, whether part of the native tissue structure or secondary to a regenerative procedure (e.g., an implant), is not known. In this study, we developed an experimental model of angiogenesis wherein growing neovessels must interact with a 3D interstitial collagen matrix interface that separates two distinct tissue compartments. Using this model, we determined that matrix interfaces act as a barrier to neovessel growth, deflecting growing neovessels parallel to the interface. Computational modeling of the neovessel/matrix biomechanical interactions at the interface demonstrated that differences in collagen fibril density near and at the interface are the likely mechanism of deflection, while fibril alignment guides deflected neovessels along the interface. Interestingly, stromal cells facilitated neovessel interface crossing during angiogenesis via a vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF)-A dependent process. However, ubiquitous addition of VEGF-A in the absence of stromal cells did not promote interface invasion. Therefore, our findings demonstrate that vascularization of a tissue via angiogenesis involves stromal cells providing positional cues to the growing neovasculature and provides insight into how a microvasculature is organized within a tissue.
组织隔室内和隔室之间相邻血管床之间的血管连通性对于任何成功的新生血管形成过程都至关重要。为了建立新的连接,正在生长的新血管在血管生成过程中必须找到其他血管成分,通常要穿过基质和其他与组织相关的边界及界面。正在生长的新血管如何穿过任何组织界面,无论是天然组织结构的一部分还是再生过程(如植入物)继发的界面,目前尚不清楚。在本研究中,我们开发了一种血管生成实验模型,其中正在生长的新血管必须与分隔两个不同组织隔室的三维间质胶原基质界面相互作用。利用该模型,我们确定基质界面充当新血管生长的屏障,使正在生长的新血管平行于界面发生偏转。对界面处新血管/基质生物力学相互作用的计算建模表明,界面附近和界面处胶原纤维密度的差异可能是偏转的机制,而纤维排列引导偏转的新血管沿着界面延伸。有趣的是,基质细胞在血管生成过程中通过依赖血管内皮生长因子A(VEGF-A)的过程促进新血管穿过界面。然而,在没有基质细胞的情况下普遍添加VEGF-A并不能促进界面侵袭。因此,我们的研究结果表明,通过血管生成实现组织血管化涉及基质细胞为正在生长的新血管系统提供位置线索,并为组织内微血管如何组织提供了见解。