First published online 26 January 2005
doi: 10.1242/dev.01675
Development 132, 941-952 (2005)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2005
Peripheral nerve-derived VEGF promotes arterial differentiation via neuropilin 1-mediated positive feedback
Yoh-suke Mukouyama1,2,
Hans-Peter Gerber3,
Napoleone Ferrara3,
Chenghua Gu2,4 and
David J. Anderson1,2,*
1 Division of Biology 216-76, California Institute of Technology, 1201 E.
California Boulevard, Pasadena, CA 91125, USA
2 Howard Hughes Medical Institute, California Institute of Technology, 1201 E.
California Boulevard, Pasadena, CA 91125, USA
3 Department of Molecular Oncology, Genentech, South San Francisco, CA94080,
USA
4 Department of Neuroscience, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine,
725 North Wolfe Street, Baltimore, MA21205, USA

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Fig. 1. Activity of Wnt1-Cre or Isl1-Cre in peripheral nerves.
The spinal cord and dorsal root ganglia (DRG) of E14.5 Rosa26
Cre-dependent lacZ reporter (R26R) line with Wnt1-Cre
(A,C,E,G,I) or Isl1-Cre transgene (B,D,F,H,J) are shown. Triple
immunofluorescence confocal microscopy with antibodies to ß-galactosidase
(ß-gal) (red), the glial marker BFABP (blue) and the neuronal marker HuD
(green) is shown. Open arrowheads indicate DRG and open arrows indicate
motoneurons in the spinal cord. White arrows indicate Cre activation in
motoneurons. Insets are higher-magnification details of the DRG. Scale bar:
100 µm. (K) Schematic illustrating peripheral nerve-specific Cre activation
(blue).
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Fig. 2. VEGFA is required for arterial differentiation in limb skin. (A-F,H-M)
triple immunofluorescence confocal microscopy using antibodies to either NRP1
(A-F, red, arrows and arrowhead) or CX40 (H-M, red, arrows and arrowhead),
together with antibodies to PECAM1 (A-C,H-J, blue) and neurofilament (2H3)
(A-C,H-J, green, open arrowheads). Arrowheads indicate large-diameter vessels.
(G,N) Quantitative analysis of arterial marker expression in small-diameter
vessels. Asterisks indicate statistically significant differences
(P<0.05) in Vegfflox/flox or Wnt1-Cre;
Vegfflox/flox compared with Wnt1-Cre; Isl1-Cre;
Vegfflox/flox (Student's t-test). (O-T) Whole-mount
double labeling with TUNEL (O-T, red, arrows) and PECAM1 (O-Q, blue) reveals
that no significant increase in apoptosis in the absence of nerve-VEGFA,
confirmed by quantitative analysis (U). Scale bars: 100µm.
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Fig. 3. VEGFA is required for normal DRG vascularization. (A-F) Double
immunofluoresence confocal microscopy of E15.5 trunk sections performed using
antibodies to PECAM1 (A-D, blue) and HuD (A,B,E,F, green). (G) Quantification
of length of PECAM1+ vascular branching in DRG. The internal
vascularization of the DRG (C, arrow) is disrupted in the nerve-Vegfa
conditional mutants (D), while vessels peripheral to the DRG appeared
unaffected (C,D, arrowheads). Asterisk indicates a statistically significant
difference (P<0.05) in Vegfflox/flox compared
with Wnt1-Cre; Isl1-Cre; Vegfflox/flox (Student's
t-test). Scale bar: 100 µm.
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Fig. 4. Nerve-blood vessel alignment is unaffected in the absence of nerve-derived
VEGFA. (A-H) Whole-mount triple immunofluorescence confocal microscopy using
antibodies to BFABP (A-H, red), PECAM1 (A-H, blue) and neurofilament (2H3)
(A-D, green) is shown. Close-up images (C,D,G,H) show the boxed regions in
A,B,E,F. Arrows indicate blood vessels, arrowheads the aligned nerves and open
arrowheads Schwann cells. Scale bars: 100 µm. (I) The alignment of nerves
with blood vessels was quantified as the percentage of nerve length aligned
with vessels.
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Fig. 5. Reduction of VEGFA expression by Cre-mediated recombination. (A-H) Triple
immunofluorescence confocal microscopy using antibodies to VEGF (A,B,E,F,
red), HuD (C-F, green) and BFABP (G,H, blue). Arrows indicate DRG; arrowheads
indicate spinal cord. (I) Quantification of anti-VEGFA immunoreactivity in DRG
in embryos of various genotypes. There was no consistent alteration in either
HuD+ neuronal (C,D) or BFABP+ glial (G,H) development in
multiple specimens. Scale bars: 100 µm. (J) The efficient deletion of the
floxed Vegf allele was determined by PCR analysis of DRG. The PCR
product of the recombined allele is smaller than that of the non-recombined
allele.
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Fig. 6. NRP1 is required for arteriogenesis in limb skin. Analysis of E15.5 limbs
from Tie2-Cre; Nrp1flox/- mutants or control littermates
(Nrp1flox/+) is shown. (A-D,F-I) Triple immunofluorescence
confocal microscopy using antibodies to either CX40 (A-D, red) or SMA
(F-I, red), together with anti-PECAM1 (A,B,F,G, blue) and neurofilament (2H3)
(A,B,F,G, green). (E) Quantification of CX40 expression, and (J) of
SMA+ cell coverage in small-diameter vessels. Asterisks
indicate statistically significant differences (P<0.05) in
Tie2-Cre; Nrp1flox/- compared with
Nrp1flox/+ (Student's t-test). Nerve-blood vessel
alignment in the Tie2-Cre; Nrp1flox/- mutants appears
normal (C versus D, H versus I, arrows and open arrowheads). Scale bars: 100
µm.
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Fig. 7. NRP1 expression and arterial induction by VEGF164 in vitro.
(A-L) PECAM1+, ephrin B2-ß-gal- embryonic
endothelial cells isolated by flow cytometry from
Efnb2lacZ/+ knock-in embryos were cultured in 100 pg/ml of
VEGF120 or VEGF164 plus 10 ng/ml bFGF for 2 days, and
double-labeled with antibodies to either ß-gal (A-F, red) or NRP1 (G-L,
red) together with PECAM1 (A-C,G-I, green). Scale bars: 100 µm. (M)
Preferential induction of ephrin B2 by VEGF164. Cells as in A-L
were cultured in the indicated concentrations of VEGF120 or
VEGF164 for 2 days, followed by double-labeling with anti-PECAM and
X-gal. Both the percentage of ECs expressing ephrin B2-lacZ (left)
and the total number of ECs (right) were determined. The concentrations of
VEGF120 were 1.4-fold higher, on a molar basis, then the
concentration of VEGF164 used at each serial dilution. Bars
represent mean±s.e.m. Asterisks indicate statistically significant
differences (P<0.05) between VEGF164 and
VEGF120 (Student's t-test).
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Fig. 8. Schematic models for nerve-mediated arterial differentiation and vascular
branching in the limb skin. (A) Proposed sequence of events in vascularization
of limb. A low concentration of VEGFA, or a distinct nerve-derived signal
(`factor X') promotes nerve-vessel alignment, followed by VEGFA/NP-1-dependent
arteriogenesis in nerve-aligned vessels. Modified from Cleaver and Krieg
(Cleaver and Krieg, 1999 ). (B)
VEGF promotes arteriogenesis via an NRP1-mediated positive-feedback loop. All
vessels (blue) are initially equivalent. Nerve-derived VEGFA promotes arterial
differentiation and NRP1 amplifies the VEGFA effect due to increased
sensitivity to VEGF164 in vessels in close proximity to nerves (N,
green). A, artery.
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© The Company of Biologists Ltd 2005