PUBLICATION

Nogo-B receptor deficiency causes cerebral vasculature defects during embryonic development in mice

Authors
Rana, U., Liu, Z., Kumar, S.N., Zhao, B., Hu, W., Bordas, M., Cossette, S., Szabo, S., Foeckler, J., Weiler, H., Chrzanowska-Wodnicka, M., Holtz, M.L., Misra, R.P., Salato, V., North, P., Ramchandran, R., Miao, Q.R.
ID
ZDB-PUB-160110-4
Date
2016
Source
Developmental Biology   410(2): 190-201 (Journal)
Registered Authors
Ramchandran, Ramani
Keywords
none
MeSH Terms
  • Animals
  • Blood Vessels/embryology*
  • Cerebrovascular Circulation*
  • Female
  • Mice
  • Mice, Knockout
  • Pregnancy
  • Receptors, Cell Surface/genetics*
PubMed
26746789 Full text @ Dev. Biol.
Abstract
Nogo-B receptor (NgBR) was identified as a receptor specific for Nogo-B. Our previous work has shown that Nogo-B and its receptor (NgBR) are essential for chemotaxis and morphogenesis of endothelial cells in vitro and intersomitic vessel formation via Akt pathway in zebrafish. Here, we further demonstrated the roles of NgBR in regulating vasculature development in mouse embryo and primitive blood vessel formation in embryoid body culture systems, respectively. Our results showed that NgBR homozygous knockout mice are embryonically lethal at E7.5 or earlier, and Tie2Cre-mediated endothelial cell-specific NgBR knockout (NgBR ecKO) mice die at E11.5 and have severe blood vessel assembly defects in embryo. In addition, mutant embryos exhibit dilation of cerebral blood vessel, resulting in thin-walled endothelial caverns. The similar vascular defects also were detected in Cdh5(PAC)-CreERT2 NgBR inducible ecKO mice. Murine NgBR gene-targeting embryonic stem cells (ESC) were generated by homologous recombination approaches. Homozygous knockout of NgBR in ESC results in cell apoptosis. Heterozygous knockout of NgBR does not affect ESC cell survival, but reduces the formation and branching of primitive blood vessels in embryoid body culture systems. Mechanistically, NgBR knockdown not only decreases both Nogo-B and VEGF-stimulated endothelial cell migration by abolishing Akt phosphorylation, but also decreases the expression of CCM1 and CCM2 proteins. Furthermore, we performed immunofluorescence (IF) staining of NgBR in human cerebral cavernous malformation patient tissue sections. The quantitative analysis results showed that NgBR expression levels in CD31 positive endothelial cells is significantly decreased in patient tissue sections. These results suggest that NgBR may be one of important genes coordinating the cerebral vasculature development.
Genes / Markers
Figures
Expression
Phenotype
Mutations / Transgenics
Human Disease / Model
Sequence Targeting Reagents
Fish
Antibodies
Orthology
Engineered Foreign Genes
Mapping