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The interaction of Eph receptor tyrosine kinases with their transmembrane ligands; the ephrins, is important for the regulation of cell-cell communication. Ephrin-Eph signaling is probably best known for the discrimination of arterial and venous territories by repulsion of venous endothelial cells away from those with an arterial fate. Ultimately, cell repulsion is mediated by initiating the collapse of the actin cytoskeleton in membrane protrusions. Here, we investigated the role of the Ena/VASP family of actin binding proteins in endothelial cell repulsion initiated by ephrin ligands. Human endothelial cells dynamically extended sheet-like lamellipodia over ephrin-B2 coated surfaces. While lamellipodia of control siRNA transfected cells rapidly collapsed, resulting in a pronounced cell repulsion from the ephrin-B2 surfaces, the knockdown of Ena/VASP proteins impaired the cytoskeletal collapse of membrane protrusions and the cells no longer avoided the repulsive surfaces. Mechanistically, ephrin-B2 stimulation elicited the EphB-mediated tyrosine phosphorylation of VASP, which abrogated its interaction with the focal adhesion protein Zyxin. Nck2 was identified as a novel VASP binding protein, which only interacted with the tyrosine phosphorylated VASP protein. Nck links Eph-receptors to the actin cytoskeleton. Therefore, we hypothesize that Nck-Ena/VASP complex formation is required for actin reorganization and/or Eph receptor internalization downstream of ephrin-Eph interaction in endothelial cells, with implications for endothelial navigation and pathfinding.
VASP is a member of the Enabled/VASP protein family that is involved in cortical actin dynamics and may also contribute to the formation of gap junctions. In vessels, gap junctional coupling allows the transfer of signals along the vessel wall and coordinates vascular behavior. Moreover, VASP is reportedly a mediator of NO-induced inhibition of platelet aggregation. Therefore, we hypothesized that VASP exerts also important physiologic functions in arterioles. We examined the spread of vasodilations enabled by gap junctional coupling in endothelial cells as well as NO-induced arteriolar dilations in VASP-deficient mice by intravital microscopy of the microcirculation in a skeletal muscle in anesthetized mice. Conducted dilations were initiated by brief, locally confined stimulation of the arterioles with acetylcholine. The maximal diameters of the arterioles under study ranged from 30 to 40 μm. Brief stimulation with acetylcholine induced a short dilation at the local site that was also observed at remote, upstream sites without an attenuation of the amplitude up to a distance of 1.2 mm in control animals (wild-type). In contrast, remote dilations were reduced in VASP-deficient mice despite a similar local dilation indicating an impairment of conducted dilations. Superfusion of NOdonors induced a concentration-dependent dilation in wild-type mice. However, these dilations were slightly reduced in VASP-deficient animals. In contrast, dilations induced by the endothelial stimulator acetylcholine were fully preserved in VASP-deficient mice. In summary, this study suggests that VASP exerts critical functions in arteriolar diameter control. It is crucial for the conduction of dilator signals along the endothelial cell layer. The impairment possibly reflects a perturbed formation of gap junctions in the endothelial cell membrane. VASP also participates in the full dilatory potential of NOdonors although the effect of its deficiency is only subtle. In contrast, VASP is not required for dilations initiated by endothelial stimulation which are mediated in the murine microcirculation by an EDH-mechanism.
Endothelial tip cells are essential for VEGF-induced angiogenesis, but underlying mechanisms are elusive. The Ena/VASP protein family, consisting of EVL, VASP, and Mena, plays a pivotal role in axon guidance. Given that axonal growth cones and endothelial tip cells share many common features, from the morphological to the molecular level, we investigated the role of Ena/VASP proteins in angiogenesis. EVL and VASP, but not Mena, are expressed in endothelial cells of the postnatal mouse retina. Global deletion of EVL (but not VASP) compromises the radial sprouting of the vascular plexus in mice. Similarly, endothelial-specific EVL deletion compromises the radial sprouting of the vascular plexus and reduces the endothelial tip cell density and filopodia formation. Gene sets involved in blood vessel development and angiogenesis are down-regulated in EVL-deficient P5-retinal endothelial cells. Consistently, EVL deletion impairs VEGF-induced endothelial cell proliferation and sprouting, and reduces the internalization and phosphorylation of VEGF receptor 2 and its downstream signaling via the MAPK/ERK pathway. Together, we show that endothelial EVL regulates sprouting angiogenesis via VEGF receptor-2 internalization and signaling.