Fabio Aimi1, Stavroula Georgiopoulou1, Ina Kalus1, Fabienne Lehner1, Alica Hegglin2, Përparim Limani3, Vinicius Gomes de Lima1, Markus A Rüegg4, Michael N Hall4, Nicole Lindenblatt2,5, Elvira Haas1, Edouard J Battegay1,5,6, Rok Humar1,5. 1. Department of Internal Medicine, University Hospital, CH-8091 Zürich, Switzerland. 2. Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, University Hospital, CH-8091 Zürich, Switzerland. 3. Division of Visceral and Transplant Surgery, University Hospital, CH-8091 Zürich, Switzerland. 4. Biozentrum, University of Basel, CH-4057 Basel, Switzerland. 5. Zürich Center for Integrative Human Physiology, University of Zürich, Switzerland. 6. Center of Competence Multimorbidity and University Research Priority Program "Dynamics of Healthy Aging", University of Zurich, Switzerland.
Abstract
To explore the general requirement of endothelial mTORC2 during embryonic and adolescent development, we knocked out the essential mTORC2 component Rictor in the mouse endothelium in the embryo, during adolescence and in endothelial cells in vitro. During embryonic development, Rictor knockout resulted in growth retardation and lethality around embryonic day 12. We detected reduced peripheral vascularization and delayed ossification of developing fingers, toes and vertebrae during this confined midgestational period. Rictor knockout did not affect viability, weight gain, and vascular development during further adolescence. However during this period, Rictor knockout prevented skin capillaries to gain larger and heterogeneously sized diameters and remodeling into tortuous vessels in response to FGF2. Rictor knockout strongly reduced extensive FGF2-induced neovascularization and prevented hemorrhage in FGF2-loaded matrigel plugs. Rictor knockout also disabled the formation of capillary-like networks by FGF2-stimulated mouse aortic endothelial cells in vitro. Low RICTOR expression was detected in quiescent, confluent mouse aortic endothelial cells, whereas high doses of FGF2 induced high RICTOR expression that was associated with strong mTORC2-specific protein kinase Cα and AKT phosphorylation. We demonstrate that the endothelial FGF-RICTOR axis is not required during endothelial quiescence, but crucial for midgestational development and sustained and extensive neovascularization in the adult.
To explore the general requirement of endothelial mTORC2 during embryonic and adolescent development, we knocked out the essential mTORC2 component Rictor in the mouse endothelium in the embryo, during adolescence and in endothelial cells in vitro. During embryonic development, Rictor knockout resulted in growth retardation and lethality around embryonic day 12. We detected reduced peripheral vascularization and delayed ossification of developing fingers, toes and vertebrae during this confined midgestational period. Rictor knockout did not affect viability, weight gain, and vascular development during further adolescence. However during this period, Rictor knockout prevented skin capillaries to gain larger and heterogeneously sized diameters and remodeling into tortuous vessels in response to FGF2. Rictor knockout strongly reduced extensive FGF2-induced neovascularization and prevented hemorrhage in FGF2-loaded matrigel plugs. Rictor knockout also disabled the formation of capillary-like networks by FGF2-stimulated mouse aortic endothelial cells in vitro. Low RICTOR expression was detected in quiescent, confluent mouse aortic endothelial cells, whereas high doses of FGF2 induced high RICTOR expression that was associated with strong mTORC2-specific protein kinase Cα and AKT phosphorylation. We demonstrate that the endothelial FGF-RICTOR axis is not required during endothelial quiescence, but crucial for midgestational development and sustained and extensive neovascularization in the adult.
Controlled angiogenesis is required during early development to generate the peripheral
vasculature and in the adult to regenerate damaged tissue and the endometrial lining. In
contrast, uncontrolled angiogenesis, which is characterized by an unorganized, tortuous
and hyper-permeable vascular network, is induced in many pathological processes,
including tumor growth, metastasis, diabetic retinopathy, and arthritis12. Angiogenic cascades are initiated by potent angiogenic molecules, such as fibroblast
growth factor (FGF) or vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF). FGF and VEGF both
activate the protein kinase mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR)34 via
phosphatidylinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) activation. Pharmacological inhibition of
mTOR-linked signaling has been shown to reduce tumor angiogenesis and tumor growth in
various experimental models. The mTOR inhibitor, rapamycin, suppresses tumor
angiogenesis in vivo by downregulating VEGF56. Furthermore, dual
PI3K and mTOR inhibitors block VEGF-induced neovascularization in mice789. Similarly, dual mTOR inhibitors have been shown to considerably
reduce angiogenesis and regrowth compared to rapamycin alone10.MammalianTOR acts as the core protein kinase in two different multi-protein complexes:
mTOR complex (mTORC) 1 and 2. In most tissues, rapamycin is largely selective for
mTORC111.The complex of interest in this study is mTORC2, which contains the essential regulatory
proteins RICTOR, mSIN1, and mLST8. mTORC2 integrates signals from growth factors to
regulate cell survival or cytoskeleton organization. In addition, mTORC2 phosphorylates
AGC kinase family members, such as AKT and protein kinase Cα
(PKCα)11 and is implicated in the epithelial-mesenchymal
transition (EMT)1213. Embryos lacking Rictor or Mlst8 in
the whole body are growth retarded and die at around midgestation1415.
We have previously shown that hypoxia, a main stimulus for angiogenesis, induces
transient mTORC1 activity, whereas mTORC2-induced AKT activation is sustained and
critical for endothelial proliferation16. This suggested a specific
function of mTORC2 in angiogenesis in vivo. Recently, distinct mTORC2 signaling
pathways have been reported to regulate endothelial cell proliferation and vascular
assembly in response to VEGF17.High doses of rapamycin or its prolonged delivery can also block mTORC2 in endothelial
cells18. Thus, rapamycin-based inhibitors cannot differentiate
between the functions of mTORC1 and mTORC2 and specific mTORC2 inhibitors are not
available. Here we therefore deleted Rictor in the endothelium to study the
general requirement of endothelial mTORC2 during embryonic and adolescent development.
Our second main aim was to elucidate whether endothelial RICTOR participates in vascular
changes upon wounding and extensive angiogenic stimulation in the existing capillary bed
and during de novo angiogenesis.
Results
Loss of endothelial homozygous Rictor results in embryonic
lethality around embryonic day (E) 11.5–12.5
Whole-body mTORC2 knockout mice are embryonically lethal. Guertin and colleagues
suggested vascular defects as a potential reason for early embryonic death1415. We further investigated the loss of Rictor in
endothelial cells during embryogenesis by using a constitutive VE-Cadherin
promoter-driven Cre and LacZ reporter containing19
Rictor knockout. The analysis of 101 pups revealed two homozygous
Rictor knockout mice, indicating predominant embryonic lethality.
Heterozygous Rictor knockout and wildtype mice were born at expected
Mendelian ratios (Fig. 1A). Interestingly, the two
surviving RictorΔec mice were females,
fertile, and phenotypically normal. When further used for breeding, these two
RictorΔec mice gave birth only to
heterozygous and wildtype Rictor pups. We then analyzed 43 embryos
received after terminated pregnancy on day E10.5. 11 out of these embryos were
genotyped as homozygous knockouts. LacZ reporter-positive
RictorΔec and wildtype embryos displayed
endothelial cell-specific Cre recombination, as visualized by
β-galactosidase staining in intersegmental vessels, intracranial
arteries, and the dorsal aorta. RictorΔec
homozygous embryos generally appeared normal and were viable at this time point.
LacZ activity in the dorsal longitudinal anastomotic vessel was clearly visible
in wildtype embryos but was less prominent in 7 out of 11
RictorΔec embryos, indicating reduced or
delayed angiogenesis into the periphery from intersegmental vessels (Fig. 1B, for additional pictures see supplementary Fig. S1). We found only one
noticeable distinct vascular feature in 2 out of 11
RictorΔec embryos compared to controls:
Vascular remodeling around the vitelline artery that usually occurs at this or
earlier timepoints20 was characterized by the presence of
numerous, thin parallel anastomosing vessels which are not observed in wild type
mouse embryos (arrows in supplementary
Fig. S1, lower panels). Thus, erythropoiesis and vasculogenesis of the
primitive vascular plexus with further remodeling of arteries and veins, which
is completed on E10.521, was not modulated by endothelial mTORC2.
To precisely determine the time point of lethality, overlapping
tamoxifen-injection schemes in pregnant mice with homozygous loxed Rictor
gene and inducible VE-Cadherin CreERT2 recombinase were used
(Fig. 2A). Injecting tamoxifen three times in pregnant
mice, starting at E7.5, produced marked and significant reductions in litter
size (Fig. 2B). However, injecting tamoxifen twice at E7.5
did not result in any differences in litter size (Fig.
2B). Rictor knockout by 60% is achieved with two injections of
tamoxifen, whereas nearly homozygous (92%) knockout is achieved with three
injections of tamoxifen every second day22. Thus, with three
injections starting on E7.5, knockout of Rictor was likely to be maximal
starting from E11.5–E12.5. On E17.5, one third of the embryos were
growth retarded, and the remaining embryos were absorbed (Fig.
2C). In addition, more than 90% of analyzed embryos were growth
retarded after tamoxifen injections began on E6.5 and E8.5 (Fig.
2C). Interestingly, tamoxifen injections that began on E12.5 and
E14.5 had no influence on viability and growth (Fig.
2C).
Figure 1
Constitutive homozygous endothelial Rictor knockout during embryonic
development is generally lethal.
(A) Rictorflox/flox females were mated with
Rictorflox/−;
VE-Cadherin-Cre+/−; LacZ
reporter+/+ males to generate homozygous deletion of
Rictor in the endothelium. Litter genotypes were determined by
qPCR and are displayed as total distribution and average number of pups per
genotype (ntotal pups = 101,
****P < 0.0001,
***P < 0.001, 1-way ANOVA with Bonferroni
multiple comparison) (B). The abovementioned breeding scheme was used
to isolate embryonic day (E) 10.5 wildtype and endothelial Rictor
knockout embryos. Representative β-galactosidase staining (blue)
of E10.5 embryos shows the active sites of VE-Cadherin-Cre recombination.
Arrows on the right indicate reduced peripheral LacZ staining in
Rictor knockout embryos (n = 7 of
11).
Figure 2
Lethality and growth retardation of induced endothelial Rictor
knockout mice peaks around E12.
(A) Tamoxifen (Tx) injection scheme: Three doses of Tx were
administered to pregnant females every 48 hours, beginning on E6.5, E7.5,
E8.5, E10.5, E12.5, and E14.5. Pregnant females were sacrificed, and embryos
were harvested on E17.5 for further histological analysis. Grey area
symbolically depicts stepwise Rictor knockout. Control females were
injected with corn oil. (B)
RictoriΔec mice exhibit decreased litter
size. Statistical analysis of the litter size of individual breedings
(nEday) after three and two Tx injections at different time
points (nE6.5 = 3,
nE7.5 = 3,
nE8.5 = 4,
nE10.5 = 3,
nE12.4 = 4,
nE14.5 = 4,) compared to controls
(n = 7). *P < 0.05,
Student’s t-test. (C) Statistical analysis of normal,
growth retarded, and absorbed embryos per breeding after Tx-injection at
different time points. Total litter size for breeding at each time point was
set to 100%, nbreedings = 3. (D)
Statistical analysis of the length of surviving embryos per litter at
different starting time points of Tx injections.
n = 4 (embryos per time point, length was measured
in both extremities), *P < 0.01 compared to
controls. Student’s t-test. (E) Representative picture of
a E17.5 RictoriΔec embryo that was induced
by Tx on E8.5 in comparison to a wildtype embryo. (F)
RictoriΔec embryos displayed distinct
vascular deficits in the eye when Tx injections started on E7.5 and embryos
harvested at E12.5 and stained with the vessel-specific antibody, endomucin.
Scale bar = 100 μm. Arrows
indicate angiogenic sprouts. (G)
RictoriΔec embryos display a delay in
ossification. Representative pictures of the upper limbs of embryos stained
with alizarin red (bone) and alcian blue (cartilage). Arrows: ossification
centers. Below, quantification with number of ossification centers in
fingers upon knockout of Rictor at indicated starting time points of
Tx injections. *P < 0.05,
**P < 0.01, compared to E14.5;
nembryo = 4 (number of centers was
measured in both extremities and averaged for each embryo), Mann-Whitney
Rank Sum Test.
Embryos that were injected with tamoxifen on E8.5 had a body length of
approximately 14 mm, whereas embryos that were injected on E14.5 had
a body length of 19.5 mm. Wildtype embryos at embryonic day 17.5
displayed a body length of 18–22 mm (Fig.
2D). Furthermore, growth-retarded embryos did not display wrinkled
skin; instead, the skin was rather thin, and subcutaneous veins were visible
(Fig. 2E). To investigate whether endothelial-specific
Rictor knockout causes a delay in vascularization, embryos received
three injections of tamoxifen that started on E7.5, after which they were
sacrificed at E12.5. The majority of endomucin-stained vascular plexi were
present in both RictoriΔec and control
embryos. Due to mortality at this time point, we detected only 5 knockout
embryos out of three terminated pregnancies with induced knockout. We detected
reduced sprouting angiogenesis in subdermal vessels in the ventral region and of
RictoriΔec embryos (2 out of 5
RictoriΔec embryos) (Fig.
2F). Also, the temporary hyaloid vessels in the eye had formed
incompletely (3 out of 5 RictoriΔec embryos)
(Fig. 2F). In growth-retardedRictormice that were that
were first injected with tamoxifen on E.6.5 and E8.5, ossification centers in
the fingers were strongly reduced or missing when analyzed on E17.5 as compared
to embryos that were first injected on E14.5 (Fig. 2G,
alizarin red (bone) and alcian blue (cartilage) stainings and quantification of
ossification centers below). Embryos that were first injected on E14.5 displayed
an ossification progress comparable to wildtype mice as demonstrated earlier by
Gollner et al.23 Similarly, the progress of ossification
in the vertebrae was clearly delayed in embryos that were first injected with
tamoxifen on E8.5, and the long bones of the upper and lower limbs were
significantly shorter in embryos that received their first tamoxifen injections
on E6.5 and E8.5 compared to embryos that received their first tamoxifen
injections on E14.5 (supplementary Fig.
S2). CD31 staining from skin, brain, skeletal muscle, lung, and colon
sections of growth-retarded RictoriΔec mice on
the other hand were morphologically indistinguishable from sections of wildtype
control mice (supplementary Fig.
S3).In summary, endothelial Rictor knockout resulted in lethality which peaked
around E12 and growth retardation close to this time point in midgestation.
Growth retardation was accompanied by delayed bone ossification in fingers, toes
and vertebrae. Rictor knockout delayed peripheral angiogenesis, but did
not generally affect vascular plexus formation.
Endothelial-specific Rictor knockout has no obvious effect on
viability and weight gain during adolescence into adulthood
We proceeded to analyze the general requirement of endothelial mTORC2/RICTOR
using the inducible VE-Cadherin-driven CreERT2 variant
(RictoriΔec) during adolescence from the
age of 4 weeks (at the time of tamoxifen-induced Rictor knockout) to
adulthood, up to an age of 28 weeks. No statistically significant differences in
weight gain were observed between genotypes and genders (Fig.
3A). Furthermore, all groups displayed normal health and viability.
At the end of the weight study, the aorta from male control and
Rictormice were removed,
the endothelium was scraped, and Rictor mRNA levels were determined by
quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) to show stable, efficient, and
significant knockdown of Rictor (Fig. 3B).
Adolescent double transgenic mice (Cre+/+;
Rictorlox/lox) also displayed specific CRE expression
in capillaries from the mouse dermal skin muscle, as shown by estrogen
receptor-specific staining in tissues that were used for intravital experiments
(Fig. 3C). Although VE-Cadherin promoter-driven Cre
recombination may also affect hematopoietic development22, we
found similar hematological profiles in 8-week-old control and
RictoriΔec mice. These profiles were
comparable to those of healthy C57/Bl6 mice (supplemental Fig. S4).
Figure 3
Rictor knockout does not affect weight gain and viability in
adolescent mice.
(A) Body weights were followed in male and female mice over a period
of 27 weeks after induction of knockout or control on week 4.
n = 10 per genotype and gender, n.s., 2-way ANOVA
with group-wise comparison. All mice displayed normal health, behavior, and
viability. (B) At the end of the experiment, RNA was extracted from
endothelial layer for quantitative polymerase chain reaction (PCR) analysis
to test for efficient excision of Rictor
(n = 3/2, *P < 0.05.
2-tailed T-test), and qualitatively for purity of endothelial tissue
(endothelial marker Pecam1, smooth muscle marker αSMA).
Total aorta mRNA was used as comparative control. Representative
immunostainings for estrogen receptor 2 (red fluorescence) in histological
sections of the skinfold from 10-week-old
RictoriΔec mice demonstrates specific
expression of CreERT2 recombinase associated with
capillaries.
These experiments demonstrate that the stable ablation of endothelial mTORC2 in
adolescent mice, which persisted until late adulthood, did not cause obvious
general health problems, as supported by normal hematological profiles, weight
gain, and viability.
Rictor knockout in mouse aortic endothelial cells (MAEC)
differentially disables the formation of capillary-like endothelial
networks
Our results so far suggested, that knockout of Rictor in endothelial cells
has no obvious effects on the development during adolescence in mice and
therefore may not affect basic physiologic parameters of the endothelial cell
such as survival and homeostatic functions in the existing and developing
vasculature. Before continuing investigations about the role of mTORC2 in
activated endothelium in vivo, we used an in vitro assay to
determine the angiogenic response of control and Rictor knockout mouse
aortic endothelial cells to the two major angiogenic molecules FGF and VEGF
(Characteristic endothelial markers of these cells are shown in supplementary Fig. S5). After plating on a
basement membrane matrix gel, endothelial cells build capillary-like tubes with
a lumen within a short time. Cells initially attach to the matrix and then
migrate towards each other, after which they align and form tubes24. We found that control MAEC formed connected master segments in the presence
of the diluent (1% fetal calf serum [FCS]), FGF2, and VEGFA (Fig.
4A). Rictor knockout was induced by CRE recombinase expression after
adenoviral transfection (Fig. 4, lower left panel). We
found, that the ability of MAEC with Rictor knockout (Rictor ko
MAEC) to build stable contacts and connecting tubes was substantially disabled:
Knockout of Rictor prevented MAEC from forming capillary-like tubes in
unstimulated conditions. Upon FGF2 stimulation, Rictor ko MAEC arranged
into star-like shapes, with sprouts extending from cell clusters, but did not
establish contacts to other cell clusters and formed significantly less master
segments compared to control (Fig. 4). In contrast to the
study by Wang et al.17, VEGFA stimulation partially
rescued endothelial network formation in Rictor ko MAEC. Rictor ko
MAEC were able to form some substantial networks and organized tubes, albeit in
in numbers that were small and similar to those of control MAEC (Fig. 4).
(A) Representative micrographs show endothelial network formation
after 18 hours of seeding. Quantification (total number of master segments
that connect to at least two other segments) of endothelial tube formation
from three experiments is shown below. (Bars; mean and SEM,
nexp = 3,
*P < 0.05 versus control. Paired T-Test).
FGF-treated Rictor ko MAEC typically formed star-shaped centers with
omni-directional sprouting and no connection to neighboring centers.
Efficient Rictor knockout displayed by RICTOR and CRE protein
expression from control (AdCre–) and Rictor ko (AdCre+)
MAEC (n = 3) is displayed on the lower right.
As we found that the angiogenic response to FGF2 was significantly more affected
by Rictor knockout than that to VEGF, we further focused on FGF2-mediated
responses in endothelial cells and angiogenesis assays in vivo in this
study.
FGF2 amplifies RICTOR protein and RICTOR-dependent phosphorylation of AKT
on serine 473 and PKCa on serine 657
Interestingly, we found a consistently low expression of RICTOR in starved,
unstimulated and confluent MAEC isolates, whereas FGF2 amplified RICTOR protein
levels. Quantification demonstrated a significant increase in RICTOR protein at
5 ng/ml of FGF2 peaking at an 8-fold expression compared to diluent
at 50 ng/ml of FGF2. (Fig. 5A, upper left
panels). We assessed how FGF2-induced signaling is altered in mTORC2-deficient
endothelial cells and focused on one of the main mTORC2 downstream targets,
PKCα and AKT25. In control MAEC, FGF2 induced the
dose-dependent phosphorylation of the hydrophobic motif (HM) of PKCα
on serine 657 (PSer657PKCα). Interestingly, deletion
of Rictor strongly decreased PKCα protein levels and
accordingly blunted the phosphorylation of the HM of PKCα in
response to FGF2, FCS, and insulin (Fig. 5A).
PKCα signaling was strongly disabled in Rictor ko MAEC, and
this was most likely a result of total PKCα protein destabilization
and degradation due to absent phosphorylation25. We then assessed
the impact of Rictor deletion in MAEC on mTORC downstream target protein
kinase AKT (also known as PKB). The phosphorylation of the activation loop
(A-loop) on threonine 308 (PThr308AKT) by
phosphoinositide-dependent kinase 1 (PDK1) and of the HM at serine 473 of AKT
(PSer473AKT) by mTORC2 results in AKT activation1126. In control MAEC, FGF2 induced a marked and dose-dependent
PSer473AKT that peaked at 25 ng/ml of FGF2.
Rictor knockout efficiently and significantly blunted FGF2-, FCS-,
and insulin-induced AKT phosphorylation (Fig. 5A,
quantification to the right). The disruption of mTORC2 has been shown to
decrease PThr308AKT in some cancer cell lines11.
In control MAEC, PThr308AKT was robustly induced by FGF2, FCS,
and insulin. After Rictor knockout, we did not detect a significant
reduction in PThr308AKT (Fig. 5A). These
results are consistent with reports in cells or tissues that were derived from
mice with genetic deletions of mTORC2 components. In these mice, A-loop
phosphorylation was not disrupted in the absence of
PSer473AKT142527.
Figure 5
FGF2 amplifies RICTOR protein and Rictor-dependent phosphorylation of
AKT on serine 473 and PKCa on serine 657.
(A) Western blots show RICTOR and downstream targets of mTORC2 after
15 min stimulation of control and Rictor ko MAEC with
5–50 ng/ml of FGF2, 10% FCS or
1 μg/ml insulin (Ins). Significant increase in
RICTOR protein at 5 ng/ml of FGF2 stimultion peaking at an
8-fold expression at 50 ng/ml of FGF2 compared to diluent in 3
repeated experiments in a MAEC isolate
(control = white bars,
nexp = 3,
*P < 0.05,
**P < 0.001, 1-way ANOVA with Bonferroni
multiple comparison, upper left panels). PKCα protein was nearly
absent in Rictor ko MAEC compared to control (middle panels).
Densitometric quantification shows dose-dependent AKT Ser473
phosphorylation in response to FGF2, FCS and Ins (right panels,
nexp = 3,
*P < 0.05,
**P < 0.01,
***P < 0.001, repeated measures ANOVA). Lower
middle blots show S6K1 phosphorylation on PThr389 compared to
total S6K1 and phosphorylation of ERK1/2 on PThr202/Tyr204
compared to total ERK1/2 after Rictor knockout. (B) mRNA
expression after 1–6 hours stimulation (25 ng/ml
FGF2) of control and Rictor ko MAEC of VEGF receptor 1 (mFLT1,
sFlt1), VEGF receptor 2 (Kdr), VEGFA (Vegfa), FGF
receptor 1 (Fgfr1) and protein kinase Cα
(PKCα) detected by quantitative real-time PCR
(n = 3, ns knockout versus control, repeated
measures ANOVA). (C) Absolute proliferation values
(Absorption = A450 nm-A650 nm)
in FGF2-stimulated control (open circles) or Rictor ko (filled
squares) MAEC are presented.
(nexp = 3, n.s., repeated
measures ANOVA). In response to 10% FCS (right), proliferation of
Rictor ko MAEC was significantly lower compared to that of
control MAEC (n = 3,
*P < 0.05, two-tailed T-test). (D)
Migration of MAEC was measured after FGF2 (25 ng/ml) or diluent
administration for 1, 3, 6 and 9 hours (wound completely
closed = 1, n = 3, n.s.,
repeated measures ANOVA).
The depletion of AKT phosphorylation by Rictor knockout may influence
mTORC1 signaling. AKT phosphorylates and inhibits tuberous sclerosis 2 (also
known as tuberin), thus resulting in the activation of mTORC1- p70S6 kinase1
(S6K1)28. We found that FGF2 dose-dependently promoted S6K1
phosphorylation in control MAEC. After Rictor knockout, a minor but
insignificant reduction in FGF2-induced S6K1 phosphorylation was detected (Fig. 5A). No differences in the phosphorylation of
extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1 and 2 (ERK1/2) by the FGF2 gradient were
observed in control MAEC and Rictor ko MAEC (Fig.
5A)29.A close cross-talk exists among FGF2 and the different members of the VEGF family
during angiogenesis and several studies have suggested that FGF2 induces
neovascularization indirectly by activation of the VEGF/VEGFR system30. We confirmed that Vegfa mRNA substantially increased
after FGF2 stimulation, yet Rictor knockout did not affect this
induction. To investigate whether endothelial mTORC2 might modulate in
vitro angiogenesis in response to FGF2 by regulation of VEGF receptors,
we measured the mRNA-levels of the two main VEGF-receptors Flt1 (VEGFR1),
which is characteristic for stalk cells and quiescent endothelium, and
Kdr (VEGFR2), upregulated in tip cells31.
Interestingly we found a strong FGF2-induced upregulation of the membrane form
of Flt1 (mFlt1) and an even stronger induction of soluble Flt1
receptor (sFlt1) mRNA (Fig. 5B). Kdr message was
present and decreased after FGF-stimulation (Fig. 5B).
However, Rictor knockout cells induced mFlt1 and sFlt1 and
reduced Kdr message congruent to control cells after FGF2 stimulation,
which argues against endothelial tip-/stalk-cell modulation by mTORC2. FGF2 also
stimulates VEGFA in endothelial cells of forming capillaries and cultured aortic
endothelial cells32. Similarly, FGF receptor 1 (Fgfr1)
message equally increased in control and Rictor ko MAEC. The decrease in
PKCα protein after Rictor knockout was due to
posttranscriptional mechanisms as PKCα gene expression was equal in
control and Rictor ko MAEC (Fig. 5B).Furthermore, we did not observe any significant differences in endothelial
proliferation over a period of 72 hours in the dose response to FGF2 (Fig. 5C) or FGF2-induced-migration in a wound assay (Fig. 5D). However, a weak but significant
(P < 0.05,
Nexp = 4) reduction in proliferation was
detected in the presence of FCS (Fig. 5C). Similarly, we
found a significant reduction in VEGFA-induced proliferation by Rictor
knockout (Supplemental Fig. S6).In conclusion, FGF2 amplified RICTOR protein in control MAEC and Rictor
deletion in FGF2-stimulated MAEC strongly blunted PKCα signaling and
reduced AKT activity by depleting Ser473 phosphorylation. Rictor deletion
had no effects on mTORC1 signaling and FGF-induced proliferation, migration nor
did it interfere with FGF2-induced modulation of Flt1, Kdr and
Vegfa expression levels.
The structure of the capillary bed of the striated skin muscle is not
altered by endothelial-specific Rictor knockout
In preparation to study mTORC2-dependent vascular changes in response to wounding
and FGF2 in vivo, we first recorded the capillary morphology in the
existing striated skin muscle (Panniculus carnosus) vascular bed as
baseline. To do so we surgically mounted a dorsal skinfold chamber3334 to 8-week-old control and
RictoriΔec mice. We observed that the
baseline capillary bed, which was recorded 3 days post-chamber surgery, appeared
very similar in 8-week-old control and
RictoriΔec mice (Fig.
6A; supplementary video
1). Analysis of all capillary diameters measured at baseline did not
reveal significant differences (Fig. 6A)). In both
experimental groups, the vascular bed consisting of the panniculus
carnosus with its capillary structures was organized in the typical
parallel orientation, and the subcutaneous layer with draining arterioles and
venules exhibited the typical perfusion pattern of the dorsal skinfold chamber
capillaries, as observed in previous studies33. Thus, ablation of
endothelial Rictor did not interfere with the development or directly
observable functionality of the intact, unstimulated dermal microvasculature in
adolescent mice, which is in line our observation of normal growth, viability
and weight gain of adolescent mice lacking endothelial Rictor.
Figure 6
Rictor knockout disables a sustained increase in skin capillary
diameters and restricts extensive capillary remodeling in response to
FGF2.
(A) Stacked frames of representative videos of the capillary
vasculature were recorded through the dorsal skinfold chamber by intravital
fluorescence microscopy. Baseline capillary bed of the skin muscle was
assessed in 10-week-old mice (6 weeks after knockout induction) by
intravital microscopy through the unmodified dorsal skinfold chamber. Upper
(20 × magnification) and lower
micrographs (10×) display representative skin capillary beds of
control (left) and RictoriΔec (right)
mice. Capillary diameters from 10 control and
RictoriΔec mice were quantified and
pooled for statistical analysis
(ncapillaries = 253/206, no differences
between groups, 2-tailed T-test and Whisker plot, indicating median, 25%
percentile and total range to the right). Color scheme applies for whole
Fig. 6 and is displayed in upper right corner. B. Wounding response
of the capillary bed. Skin muscle capillary structure from day 1, 2, 4 and
day 7 in control (left) and RictoriΔec
mice (right) after wound sealing with heparin-containing matrigel
(20 × magnification). Capillary
diameters from 4 control and RictoriΔec
mice were quantified and pooled for statistical analysis by 1-way ANOVA
followed by Bonferroni multiple comparison (Scatter plot with medians on the
below; number of capillaries (ncapillaries) are indicated below
the X-axis, ****P < 0.0001). C.
Heterogeneous capillary diameter increase in the FGF2-stimulated capillary
bed. Skin muscle capillary structure from day 1, 2, 4 and day 7in control
(left) and RictoriΔec mice (right) after
wound sealing with FGF2 (1.5 μg/ml;
heparin-containing matrigel,
20 × magnification). Capillary diameters
from 7 control and RictoriΔec mice were
quantified and pooled for statistical analysis by 1-way ANOVA followed by
Bonferroni multiple comparison (Scatter plot and medians below; number of
capillaries are indicated below the X-axis,
****P < 0.0001). D. Capillary
remodeling in the FGF2-stimulated capillary bed. The line graph displays the
normalized distribution of capillaries
(nmax = 100) resolved in a
1-μm range after FGF2 stimulation for 7 days and illustrates
differences in remodeling between groups. Micrograph to the right shows 10x
magnification of the vascular bed of control and
RictoriΔec mice after 7 days of FGF2
exposure.
Wounding-induced capillary diameter remodeling is not impaired by
endothelial-specific Rictor knockout
We then modified this chamber by additionally removing cutis and subcutis on the
opposite side of the observation window. This defect was sealed by growth
factor-reduced matrigel (suppl. Fig.
S7). In the first set of experiments, we included diluent (heparin) in
matrigel to assess baseline alterations as a response to wound healing processes
without exogenous growth factor stimulation. Capillaries were observed and
recorded on a daily basis by intravital microscopy up to 7 days after matrigel
sealing (Fig. 6B, and supplementary video 2). Vascular morphological
parameters were quantified in vessels where perfusion was observable. The
vessels encompassed diameters ranging from 4 to 20 μm,
thus capillaries and some small arterioles or venules. Capillary diameters
significantly increased from day 1, 2, 4 and 7 compared to the baseline by about
2 μm in average for both control and
RictoriΔec capillary diameters (Fig. 6B). Importantly, the microvasculature of the
panniculus carnosus responded similarly to wounding and matrigel
sealing in control and RictoriΔec mice as we
did not detect significant differences compared to controls at days 1, 2, 3, and
7 (Fig. 6B).
Endothelial-specific Rictor knockout limits increases in the
capillary diameter of existing skin vasculature in response to high doses of
FGF2
To assess remodeling in terms of individual increases in capillary diameters in
response to strong angiogenic stimulation, we exposed the existing capillary bed
to a high dose of FGF2 (1.5 μg/ml). We focused on FGF2, since we
found that Rictor deletion specifically disabled FGF2- but not
VEGFA-dependent angiogenesis in vitro as shown earlier in this
manuscript. Furthermore, FGF2 also promotes maturation of larger vessels such as
arterioles35. Intravital recordings through the dorsal
skinfold chamber in control and RictoriΔec
revealed that diameters increased at day 1 and day 2 after FGF2 exposure (Fig. 6C, day 1 and 2). In both groups, diameters had
increased for about 3.5 μm and we found no statistical
difference between groups after testing by Bonferroni multiple comparisons
(Fig. 6C). At days 4 and 7, capillary diameters
further significantly increased in the control group when comparing to diameters
at day 1. In addition, tortuous and bulbous vascular structures developed, which
were observed in capillaries and small draining arterioles and venules (Fig. 6C, day 4 and 7). In
RictoriΔec mice, however, FGF2-induced
capillary enlargement stopped and rather regressed after day 2. Statistically,
capillary diameters at days 4 were not different from those measured at day 1.
Diameters measured on day 4 and 7 in
RictoriΔec were significantly smaller
compared to the control group on those days (Fig. 6C). We
observed, that at the end of the recording the vascular bed in
RictoriΔec mice underwent a far more
restrained and different mode of remodeling. Thin-connecting anastomoses emerged
between capillaries and draining arterioles in
RictoriΔec mice, and the orientation of
capillaries remained largely parallel (Fig. 6C and D, day
7 and supplementary video 3 and 4). The dilated and tortuous
capillary structures that developed in control mice after longer (4 and 7 days)
exposure to FGF2 are also found in vascularized tumors, which in addition
exhibit hyperpermeability36. We assessed vessel leakage of the
FGF2-stimulated skin vascular bed on day 7 by intravenously injecting
fluorescently labeled ricinus communis agglutinin I (RCA I)37.
Preliminary data could however not support an obvious decrease in permeability
by endothelial Rictor deletion as plasma leakage points were present in
capillary structures from both control and
RictoriΔec mice to a similar extent (suppl. Fig. S8).Taken together, loss of endothelial Rictor normalized vascular structure
after 4 days of exposure to FGF2 and prevented the formation of a heterogeneous,
irregular microvascular bed as seen in controls (Fig. 6D).
This suggests that endothelial mTORC2 is central to the FGF2-mediated remodeling
response that creates larger and heterogeneously sized capillaries and small
arterioles in the existing skin capillary bed beyond day 4.
Endothelial-specific Rictor knockout strongly reduces FGF2-induced
neovascularization in matrigel plugs and prevents local hemorrhage
As technical limitations disabled us to monitor sprouting angiogenesis in the
dorsal skinfold chamber, we used the matrigel plug angiogenesis assay to assess
whether endothelial mTORC2 deficiency may alter de novo vascularization
in adult mice in vivo in response to strong stimulation by FGF2
(1.5 μg/ml). Concentrations of FGF2 in this range have
been used previously to achieve maximal neovascularization after 7 days38 and to achieve macroscopically a hemorrhagic appearance (see
also supplementary Fig. S9).
Knockout of Rictor in the endothelium was induced during adolescence in
RictoriΔec mice. At 7 days after
implantation, blood-containing microvessels and signs of hemorrhage were
macroscopically evident in FGF2-containing plugs from control mice. In contrast,
FGF2-containing plugs from RictoriΔec mice
displayed homogeneous, unobtrusive vascularization. An estimation of blood
content by optical densitometry demonstrated a significant decrease after
Rictor knockout in FGF2 containing plugs compared to control plugs
(Fig. 7A, 1st row). FGF2-induced
vessels protruded to about 800 μm from the surface of
the plug into the center in plugs from control mice, whereas microvessels
protruded significantly less to only about 300 μm in
plugs from RictoriΔec mice. FGF2-induced
microvessel protrusion into the plugs from
RictoriΔec mice was not completely
abolished as we calculated a significant difference to diluent containing plugs
(Fig. 7A, 2nd row). The presence of
leaked erythrocytes in the FGF2-containing plugs from control mice from one set
of experiments demonstrated local hemorrhage (Fig. 7B,
left micrographs). In contrast, the microvasculature in FGF2-containing plugs
from RictoriΔec mice was composed of
homogenously small capillaries with no evidence of hemorrhage (Fig. 7B, right micrographs). Further micrographs showing hemorrhage
in FGF2-containing plugs from 2 other sets of experiments are displayed in supplementary Fig. S10. During the 7
days of FGF2 administration, the matrigel plug was encapsulated by a thin layer
of stromal tissue that also contained arterioles and venules. We found similar
vessel densities in plugs from both experimental groups (data not shown),
whereas the luminal diameter was significantly smaller in vessels of the stromal
capsule from RictoriΔec mice compared with
control mice. No stromal vessels were found in diluent containing plugs from
both groups (Fig. 7A, 3rd row).
Angiogenesis occurring during postnatal development is usually connected with
inflammation39. Macrophages were demonstrated to promote
angiogenesis via FGFs and placental growth factor signaling39 or
by the release of pro-angiogenic molecules3940. We therefore
investigated by CD68 immunestaining whether the stromal halo around the plugs
may contain varying amounts of macrophages that could influence de novo
angiogenesis in our experimental setting. However, we found no significant
differences in the ratio between CD68+ cells to total cell nuclei
in the peripheral stroma when comparing diluent and FGF2-containing plugs from
both groups (Fig. 7A, last row). The total amount of
CD68+ cells per field counted was also not significantly
modulated, however, we noticed a trend towards higher macrophage count in
stromal halos around FGF2-containing matrigel plugs from
RictoriΔec mice (Fig.
7A, last row). To further investigate the possibility of a mild
FGF2-dependent proinflammatory state after endothelial Rictor knockout we
measured the mRNA levels of monocyte-attracting protein 1 (Mcp1) and
vascular- and inducible cell adhesion molecules (Vcam1, Icam1) in MAEC.
FGF2 increased Vcam1 mRNA after 24 hours similarly in both control and
Rictor knockout MAEC. A slight and insignificant increase for
Icam1 mRNA was observed. FGF2 robustly (ca. 6.6 fold) induced
Mcp1 mRNA in control and Rictor knockout MAEC. Interestingly,
Mcp1 mRNA remained at high levels (ca. 5.3 fold induction) after
24 h of FGF2 stimulation and was significantly higher compared to
controls (3.3 fold) at this timepoint (Fig. 7C). Thus, it
is unlikely, that the strong reduction of FGF2-induced angiogenesis into
matrigel plugs along with ‘normalized’ microvessel
features by deletion of endothelial Rictor in vivo is caused by an
altered inflammatory response.
Figure 7
Fibroblast growth factor 2(FGF2)-induced angiogenesis in matrigel plugs is
reduced in RictoriΔec mice.
(A) 1st row: Representative matrigel plugs containing
heparin (diluent) or 1.5 μg/ml FGF2 with heparin
(FGF2) from 8-week-old male control (left) and
RictoriΔec (right) mice removed 7 days
after injection (scale bar = 1mm). Estimation of
blood content by optical densitometry is shown on the right
(nplugs = 4;
**P < 0.01; 1-way ANOVA with Bonferroni
multiple comparison). (A) 2nd row: Paraffin sections from
corresponding plugs immunostained for CD31 (brown) and hematoxylin
(blue/nuclei). Representative micrographs show
10 × magnification and display the depth
of newly in grown microvessels from the surface towards the center of the
matrigel plugs. Quantification to the right displays the significant
reduction in the ingrowth (μm) of neovessels into plugs from
RictoriΔec mice compared to control
mice (nplugs = 4/7;
**P < 0.01,
****P < 0.0001; 1-way ANOVA with Bonferroni
multiple comparison). (A) 3rd row: Representative micrographs
of peripheral stroma covering matrigel plugs. Identifiable inner microvessel
diameters were measured (graph to the right;
nplugs = 3;
*P < 0.05;2-tailed T-test ). No vessels were
found in peripheral stroma covering diluent-containing plugs. (A)
4th row: Representative micrographs of macrophage marker
CD68-immunestainings of peripheral stroma and matrigel. Graphs to the right
show ratio of CD68+/total cell nuclei in the stroma, and
average of CD68 + cells per field
counted in the stroma (nplugs = 4, no
significant differences found after 1-way ANOVA/Bonferroni multiple
comparison). (B) Representative micrographs of one set of experiments
displaying hematoxylin and eosin stained (H&E) matrigel areas
showing local leakage and hemorrhagic areas in FGF2 containing plugs from
control mice compared to plugs from
RictoriΔec mice (upper micrographs).
Lower micrographs show higher magnification of CD31-stained matrigel areas.
Arrowheads point to local spots of leaked erythrocytes in FGF2-containg
control plugs. (C) Confluent and starved control and Rictor ko MAEC
were stimulated for 1 and 24 hours with 25 ng/ml FGF2 or
diluent. mRNA expression of monocyte attracting protein 1 (Mcp1),
vascular and inducible cell adhesion molecules 1 (Vcam1, Icam1) was
detected by quantitative real-time PCR (n = 3;
*P < 0.05; 1-way ANOVA with Bonferroni
multiple comparison test).
Taken together, we observe a dense, heterogeneous neovasculature with several
patches of hemorrhage indicating disrupted or leaky capillaries that formed
after 7 days of FGF2-exposure in control mice. In contrast endothelial
Rictor knockout strongly and significantly reduced neovessel ingrowth
in response to FGF2 with capillaries remaining homogenously small, with no
evidence of hemorrhagic spots.
Discussion
In this study we deleted Rictor in the endothelium to study the general
requirement of endothelial mTORC2 during embryonic and adolescent development. Our
analysis of embryonic development using constitutive and inducible
VE-Cadherin-Cre-specific Rictor knockout confirmed that homozygous
Rictor deletion in endothelial cells is almost completely lethal and
results in embryonic death around E12. Guertin et al. proposed that vascular
defects may contribute to the lethality of whole-body Rictor knockout embryos
on E10.514. Furthermore, Wang et al. demonstrated that the
homozygous and Tie2-Cre-driven Rictor knockout is embryonically lethal17. Still, other than reductions in peripheral vascularization, we did
not detect gross abnormalities of the normal vascular plexi on E10.5. Surviving
embryos around this time frame showed rather distinct and rare deficits in
vascularization at E10.5. Surviving Rictor knockout embryos, however, consistently
displayed growth retardation and a delayed ossification of the vertebrae, toes, and
fingers. Delayed ossification may explain growth retardation but may not
categorically explain embryonic lethality of
RictoriΔec in the confined midgestational
timeframe. Thus, other essential functions that are regulated by mTORC2 during this
short period in midgestation are probable and may also account for lethality.Many signaling pathways that are involved in early embryonic development are also
recapitulated during tumorigenesis41. As we found that endothelial
mTORC2 was required during a confined, midgestational timeframe but had no apparent
influence on viability before midgestation (E8.5), beyond midgestation (E14.5),
physiological vascular development, vascular maintenance and growth from adolescence
into adulthood, we hypothesized that endothelial Rictor might promote only
‘aberrant’ endothelial phenotype modulation such as in tumor
angiogenesis or during a transition to an invasive mesenchymal phenotype. Guertin
et al. demonstrated that Rictor has no significant role by itself
in maintaining the integrity of a normal prostate epithelium in vivo but
requires Rictor to be transformed into an invasive, malignant phenotype by
Pten deletion, which results in strong PI3K activation42.
Similarly, Drosophila embryos lacking mTORC2 activity are viable and display
only minor growth defects4243. However, PTEN loss-induced
tissue overgrowth in the Drosophila eye requires dTORC243.We found that particularly FGF2 and not VEGFA depended on the mTORC2 signaling hub to
establish a capillary-like endothelial network on matrigel substrate when we tested
these PI3K-activating angiogenic molecules in vitro. We found that FGF2
elicited a strong and fast increase in the diameter of existing skin capillaries in
the dorsal skinfold chamber after two days of stimulation in both control and
RictoriΔec mice. Over a period of 7 days, FGF2
induced the progressive and extensive remodeling of vessel structures characterized
by heterogeneous and larger diameter sizes that also included larger arterioles and
a tortuous vascular bed in control mice.
RictoriΔec mice however, could not maintain
heterogeneous capillary size remodeling beyond day 2of FGF2 exposure and returned to
‘normalized’ vascular features with homogenously and smaller
sized capillary diameters and parallel-oriented capillaries. Tortuous and dilated
capillaries are also found in vascularized tumors. Tumor blood vessels furthermore
display hyperpermeability, and do not mature into functional vasculature12. However, we could not detect fewer leakage points in
FGF2-stimulated skin capillaries RictoriΔec in
preliminary investigations.However, the supply of FGF2 to the skin muscle over a period of seven days was
limited by the volume of the matrigel carrier (16 μl) and
may not have provided saturated FGF2-stimulation at all times. We therefore
continued our investigations using the matrigel plug assay carrying pathologically
high doses of FGF2 in a volume of 200 μl to induce aberrant,
leaky and tumor-like angiogenesis as reported before38. Indeed, we
observed a dense, heterogeneous neovasculature with several patches of hemorrhage
that formed after 7 days in control mice. Endothelial Rictor knockout
strongly and significantly reduced FGF2-mediated neovessel ingrowth, and capillaries
remained homogenously small with no microscopic signs of leakage. Our study thus
demonstrates that endothelial mTORC2 acted as a central signaling hub for
FGF2-induced persistent capillary diameter increases and remodeling into
heterogeneous capillary structures and formation of a leaky, tumor-like
neovasculature in the adult mouse.FGF2, which is not secreted through vesicular pathways, can be exported from cells
with unique extrusion pathways or large amounts can be released upon cell death4438. FGF2 has been selectively determined as a crucial tumorigenic
cytokine in prostate cancers in which both FGF2 and FGF2 receptor subtypes are
co-expressed4546. In addition many other tumor types express
FGF2/FGFRs at high levels384748495051. On the other hand,
fibroblast growth factors are involved in the formation of skeletal elements within
the developing limb525354. Several FGFs are expressed in
developing endochondral bone. FGF2 was the first FGF ligand to be isolated from
growth plate chondrocytes52. FGF2 expression has also been observed
in periosteal cells and in osteoblasts5155. Targeted deletion of
FGF2 causes a relatively subtle defect in osteoblastogenesis, leading to decreased
bone growth and bone density5156.Mechanistically, we could not substantiate, that the extensive mTORC2-dependent
FGF-induced angiogenic responses were executed by coupling to the VEGFA/VEGFR
system, which also determines endothelial tip-/stalk phenotypes31.
Also, FGF2-induced endothelial proliferation and migration were unaltered after
Rictor knockout. In contrast, we found VEGFA-induced proliferation to be
significantly decreased by Rictor knockout as previously reported17. Endothelial Rictor knockout resulted in dephosphorylation of
typical mTORC2 downstream targets and blunted FGF2-induced phosphorylation of
PSer473AKT and PSer657PKCα25. The results by Wang et al. suggest that mTORC2 is a critical
signaling node required for VEGF-mediated angiogenesis through the regulation of AKT
and PKCα in vascular endothelial cells17. AKT is
activated by most endothelial growth factors (FGF2, VEGF, and angiopoietin) and
orchestrates a number of signaling pathways that are involved in angiogenesis15758. For example, FGF2-induced capillary morphogenesis via FGFR1
is impaired in murine brain capillary endothelial cells expressing an inactive
AKT5759. FGF2-induced angiogenesis may partially depend on AKT
signaling, potentially via transcription factors FoxO1/FoxO3a2760.Interestingly we found that quiescent and starved MAEC expressed low levels of RICTOR
in control cells. High doses of FGF2 however induced RICTOR protein in correlation
with high PSer473AKT. Comparable findings were reported during the
epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT). Transforming growth factor
(TGF-β), a strong inducer of EMT, increased RICTOR protein and thereby
formation of mTORC2 in mouse mammary gland epithelial cells13.
Without Rictor, the epithelial cells arrested in an intermediate stage between
epithelial and mesenchymal differentiation, without the motile and invasive behavior
of cells after EMT13. Interestingly, TGFβ-1 treatment
also induces an interaction between RICTOR and integrin-linked kinase (ILK) and
promotes ILK-dependent EMT. This complex was detected in cancer but not in normal
cell types61 and overlaps with mTORC2 in the function as
PSer473AKT kinase62. Thus, Rictor could promote
EMT by forming different complexes.In parallel to EMT, endothelial to mesenchymal transition (EndoMT) can be induced by
transforming growth factor (TGF-β)63. EndoMT is a newly
recognized type of cellular transdifferentiation that participates in development,
but also in pathological conditions such as cancer and fibrosis636465. New studies have shown that EndoMT represents a
dedifferentiation of endothelial cells to a stem cell phenotype, which can
redifferentiate into bone or cartilage cells636466. Thus,
hypothetically, endothelial Rictor may be required during midgestation to promote
the transition of endothelial cells to a mesenchymal, osteogenic phenotyope to
promote FGF2-directed ossification of limbs and vertebrae. During further
development through normal adolescence where most vasculature is quiescent, with
only 0.01% of endothelial cells undergoing division67, endothelial
Rictor knockout may represent the characteristics of an unchallenged
quiescent endothelial monolayer with low RICTOR expression and AKT activity. Recent
studies suggest, during angiogenic sprouting, endothelial cells express many of
EndoMT-driving genes and break down basement membrane. However, they retain
intercellular junctions and migrate as a connected train of cells65.
This process has been termed a partial EndoMT65. The permanently
activated phenotype of tumor vasculature may well reflect the chronic activation of
the EndoMT process, driven by persistent angiogenic cascades, leading to excessive
sprouting and a failure to settle back into the mature, stable phenotype65. Thus, hypothetically, endothelial mTORC2, assembled through
increased expression of FGF2-induced RICTOR may promote neovascularization by a
sustained partial EndoMT.In conclusion, we demonstrated that endothelial Rictor is crucial for
progression through midgestation and for timely ossification. In adolescence, the
FGF2-RICTOR axis promoted sustained, extensive and aberrant neovascularization.
During adolescent vascular quiescence or moderate capillary remodeling, however,
endothelial mTORC2/RICTOR was not required. Further studies are needed to uncover
the exact molecular nature that may enable endothelial mTORC2/RICTOR to promote both
embryonic development and extensive and aberrant FGF2-dependent angiogenesis in the
adult.
Materials and Methods
Animal procedures
Mice with floxed Rictor exons6869 were crossed with mice
that express tamoxifen inducible Cre-ERT2 under the control of
the endothelium-specific VE-cadherin promoter
(VECad-Cre-ERT2)22 (kind gift of Dr.
Iruela-Arispe, Department of Molecular, Cell & Developmental Biology,
UCLA, USA) both on a congenic C57Bl/6J background. Offspring were genotyped for
Cre-recombinase, Rictorfloxed and
Rictorwt alleles using qPCR. Briefly, DNA was isolated
from ear biopsies and amplified by qPCR with the following primer pairs
(5′-3′): Forward: GCG GTC TGG CAG TAA AAA CTA TC;
Reverse: GTG AAA CAG CAT TGC TGT CAC TT. The mice were bred, housed and handled
according to the local animal ethics committee. All procedures with mice were
approved by the Veterinary Office of the Canton of Zürich,
Switzerland under licenses 77/2009 and 179/2012. We confirm that all procedures
with mice were performed according the legislation of the Swiss Protection of
Animals Act for vertebrates within the strict guidelines of the licenses 77/2009
and 179/2012 and additional local directives of the animal housing
facilities.
Whole mount embryo staining
Embryos were stained with an antibody against endomucin according to Vieira et
al.70. In brief, embryos were fixed for two hours on ice
with PBS containing 4% PFA. After three washing steps with PBS containing 0.1%
Triton X-100 and blocking of unspecific binding sites by incubation with PBS
containing 10% FCS and 0.1% Triton X-100 for 30 minutes at room temperature,
embryos were incubated with rat monoclonal antibody against endomucin (1:100,
Santa Cruz Biotechnology) dissolved in PBS over night at
4 °C followed by five washing steps with PBS at room
temperature. After incubation with secondary antibody anti-ratAlexa Fluor-555
(1:200, Molecular Probes) over night at 4 °C and three
further washing steps with PBS, embryos were mounted and analyzed by laser
scanning confocal microscopy (SP5; Leica, Wetzlar, Germany). Staining of whole
embryos for LacZ was as described previously71.
Alizarin Red and Alcian Blue stainings
For skeletal staining, embryos were fixed in 95% ethanol for more than four days,
after removal of fat and connective tissue, incubated in acetone for one day and
stained with 0.15% alcian blue 8GS (Sigma-Aldrich)/0.05% alicarin red S
(Sigma-Aldrich)/5% acetic acid in 70% ethanol at 37 °C
for two days. After bleaching in 1% KOH for 12 to 48 hours embryos were
destained with graded washes of glycerin (20% glycerin in 1% KOH, 50% glycerin
in 1% KOH and 80% KOH in 1% glycerin). Embryos were stored in 100% glycerin.
Histological analysis
Embryos and dissected organs from adult mice were fixed in 4% PFA in PBS,
transferred to ethanol and embedded in paraffin. Longitudinally-sectioned
paraffin-embedded embryos and organs were stained with hematoxylin and eosin.
For CD 31 staining paraffin sections were stained as described previously72. Sections from dorsal chambers were de-paraffinized and
rehydrated in xylene and isopropanol and antigens retrieved by boiling in Na3
citrate. Rabbit polyclonal anti-mouse Estrogen Receptor α antibody
(Millipore) was used for detection and visualized by secondary goat anti-rabbitAlexa-Fluor 555 (Invitrogen) using microscopes and cameras from Zeiss and
Olympus.
Determination of Rictor mRNA expression levels in endothelial cells
from thoracic aorta
Rictor deletion was induced in VECad-CreERT2+;
Rictorfloxed/floxed mice at an age of four weeks with
five consecutive intraperitoneal tamoxifen (Tx) injections according to the
protocol of Monvoisin et al.22. (2 mg Tx/ml
dissolved in corn oil at a concentration of 80 mg/kg bodyweight, T5648,
Sigma-Aldrich). Littermate control mice were injected with corn oil alone. This
injection protocol was used for all experiments in this study.Aortae were excised from 6 month old Tx-injected
(RictoriΔec) and control mice (Ctrl),
cleaned from adhering tissue and opened longitudinally. Endothelial cells were
carefully scraped directly in RLT buffer (Qiagen) and RNA was extracted using
the RNAeasy micro kit (Qiagen) according to the recommendations of the
manufacturer. Equal amounts of RNA were transcribed to cDNA by WT (Whole
Transcript)-Ovation™ Pico RNA Amplification System (NuGEN).
Quantitative real-time PCR was performed using a SYBR green-based standard
protocol. Primer list is shown in section ‘Real-time quantitative
reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction’. Specificity of the
primers was tested by melt curve and agarose gel analysis and sequencing.
Relative expression levels were calculated using the comparative ΔCt
method73.
Isolation of endothelial cells
Mouse aortic endothelial cells (MAECs) were isolated from aortae of
8–10 weeks old Rictor floxed male mice as described
earlier7475. Briefly, fibrin gels were prepared by mixing
3 mg/ml of fibrinogen with serum-free DMEM complemented with
non-essential amino acids, Sodium Pyruvate, Pen-Strep and thrombin on ice.
24-well plates were coated with the prepared fibrin gel allowed to polymerize at
37 °C. The excised aorta was cleaned, cut in small rings
and placed on top of the gel and overlaid by fibrin gel. After gel had
polymerized pre-warmed growth media (serum-free DMEM that contained 10% FCS,
200 μg/ml of ECGS, 10 ng/ml FGF2 and
0.1 IE/ml of heparin) was loaded to the wells. To protect the fibrin
gel from degradation, 300 μg/ml of ε-aminocaproic acid (Sigma A-7824) diluted in PBS was added to all wells every other
day. After 10 days of culturing, capillary-like sprouts were observed under the
microscope. The outgrown cells were harvested by pipetting up and down the
fibrin gel. The gel-cell mixture was transferred to a six-well plate which had
previously been coated with 0.1% gelatin gold, and 1 ml/well of
growth media w/o heparin was added. The next day, cells were washed once with
warm PBS and new EC growth media was added. Confluent cells were split 1:2 by
trypsinization using TrypLETM-Express and characterized with endothelial cell
specific immuno-fluorescent marker von Willebrand Factor (VWF, LabForce AG).
Cell culture and treatments
For all experiments using MAECs, cell culture dishes were coated with 0.1%
gelatin gold (Carl Roth GmbH 4274.1) for 20 minutes at
37 °C. MAECs were maintained in DMEM (Biochrom FG435),
complemented with 10% or 1% (complete or starvation medium) FCS (Biochrom
S0615), 1% sodium pyruvate (GIBCO 15140), 1% non-essential amino acids (GIBCO
11140) and 1% penicillin-streptomycin (GIBCO 15140). Stimulation with growth
factors always included addition of heparin at a fixed ratio (1 IU heparin per
1.5 μg/ml FGF).
Generation of Rictor ko cells
Rictor knockout was induced by adenoviral transfection of Cre-Recombinase
on Rictor floxed MAEC.
2.5 × 105
Rictor floxed MAECs were seeded on a 6 cm culture dish. The
next day, the media was removed and a virus (100 MOI) that contained either
Ade-CRE-GFP (Vector Biolabs 1045) or Ade-CMV-GFP (Vector Biolabs 1060) was added
in 1 ml of growth media to the cells. After 7 hours, the media was
removed, replaced by 4 ml of normal growth media, and incubated at
37 °C. Endothelial cells expressed GFP the following
day. Down-regulation of Rictor and disruption of mTORC2 signaling was
assessed by using qRT-PCR and western blotting 3 days after transfection (see
also Fig. 4 lower left panel). Steps that involved
handling viruses or virus-transfected cells were performed in a level-2
biosafety hood (Skan VSB 90) in a certified cell culture laboratory.
Endothelial network-formation assay in vitro
Angiogenesis in vitro was assessed on the basis of a tube formation assay.
Twenty-four-well culture plates (Costar; Corning) were coated with growth
factor-reduced matrigel (BD Biosciences) in a total volume of
150 μL and allowed to solidify for 30 min at
37 °C. Tracking dye green (CytoPainter, abcam ab138891)
was dissolved in 100 μl DMSO (=stock solution
(1000×)). 20 μl of stock solution was mixed
with 5 ml assay buffer. Cells were washed once with PBS, and
5 ml tracking dye green working solution added to the cells and
incubated for 45 min at 37 °C in an
CO2 incubator. Labeled MAEC were trypsinized and resuspended to a
concentration of 105/mL in DMEM/1% FCS.
500 μl of the cell suspension were added into each well
and complemented with diluent (heparin) and growth factors (FGF2; VEGFA 25ng/ml
with heparin). Then the cells were incubated at 37 °C
for eighteen hours. The appearance of endothelial network was observed under an
inverted microscope by fluorescence (FITC;
Ex/Em = 490/520 nm) with a 4x objective
(IX70, Olympus) and photographed. Number of master segments were quantified
automatically using the Macro ‘Angiogenesis Analyzer’ by
Gilles Carpentier (Gilles Carpentier. Contribution: Angiogenesis Analyzer,
ImageJ News, 5 October 2012) for NIH Image J 1.47v Program.
Immunoblotting
To extract protein, cells were washed twice with ice cold PBS and then harvested
by scraping with a cell scraper (BD Falcon 353089) into 1 ml of ice
cold PBS. The cell suspension was collected with a 1 ml pipette,
transferred to a 2 ml Eppendorf tube, and then centrifuged for 5
minutes at 14,000 rpm at 4 °C. The pellet
was resuspended in RIPA buffer (50 mM TrisHCl (pH7.4),
150 mM NaCl, 1 mM EDTA(pH8), 1% Triton X-100, 0.1% SDS,
0.25% Na-deoxycholate) that contained a complete mini protease inhibitor (Roche
11836153001) and a phosphatase inhibitor cocktail 2 (Sigma P5726). The sample
was centrifuged for 15 minutes at 14,000 rpm at
4 °C. The resulting supernatant was transferred to a new
1.5-ml Eppendorf tube and the protein concentration measured by using a BCA
protein assay kit (Thermo scientific 23223). Equal amounts of protein were
loaded onto a 8% acrylamide-SDS gel. Separated proteins were transferred to a
nitrocellulose membrane (Whatman BA85) using a semidry blotting procedure,
blocked for 1 hour at room temperature (RT) in 5% Bovine Serum Albumine (BSA,
Sigma-Aldrich A7906) in Tris buffered saline complemented with 0.1% Tween
(TBS-T). Membranes were washed once with TBS-T and incubated overnight at
4 °C with one of the following primary antibodies
against Rictor (#2140), Phospho-AKT (Ser473) (#9271),
Phospho-AKT(Thr308) (#9275), AKT(#9272), PKCα,
Phospho-PKCα (Ser657)(Santa Cruz Biotechnology,
#12356), Phospho-ERK1/2 (Thr202/Tyr204) (#9101),
ERK1/2 (#9102), Phospho-S6K1 (Thr389) (#9205), S6K1 (#9202) and )
and Phospho-S6 RP (Ser235/236) (#4858), all from Cell signaling
(BioConcept, Switzerland) in a dilution of usually 1:1000. Mouse anti
β-Actin 1:10,000 (Sigma A-5441) was used to control equal loading.
The next day, the membrane was washed three times in TBS-0.1% tween and
incubated with a secondary antibody goat anti rabbitHRP 1:5,000 (Cell Signaling
7074) or anti mouseHRP 1:50,000 (Cell Signaling 7076) for 1 hour at room
temperature (RT). After another wash step, a chemiluminescent substrate that is
used for the detection of HRP (Thermo Scientific 34080) was applied to the
membrane, and then the membrane was incubated for 1 minute. The signal was
detected with a CL-XPosure film (Thermo Scientific 34088), and the resulting
bands were quantified by using ImageJ (Wayne Rasband, NIH, MD, USA).
qRT-PCR was performed as described previously7677. RNA was
isolated using the RNAeasy Mini kit (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany), followed by an on
column DNA digestion (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany). cDNA was transcribed from total
RNA using Omniscript RT kit (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany) and random primers (Roche,
Basel, Switzerland). To control for DNA contamination in the qRT-PCR, for each
sample a control reaction missing reverse transcriptase was additionally
amplified. Primers used are listed
(5′ → 3′) below
(Table 1). Primers were tested by cDNA dilution series
to obtain optimal reaction conditions. qRT-PCR was performed using an iCycler iQ
Real Time PCR Detection System (Biorad, Reinach, Switzerland) and
iQ™ SYBR® Green Supermix (Biorad). Melting curve of each
representative reaction was analyzed. The qRT-PCR was quantified using the
formula:
2−ΔCT = CT
gene of interest – CT
Tubulin73.
Table 1
Gene
Forward
Reverse
Rictor
TGC GAT ATT GGC CAT AGT GA
ACC CGG CTG CTC TTA CTT CT,
Gapdh
AAA TGG TGA AGG TCG GTG TG
GTT GAA TTT GCC GTG AGT GG,
Tubulin (Tuba1a)
TCA CTG TGC CTG AAC TTA CC
GGA ACA TAG CCG TAA ACT GC
β-actin (Acta1)
CGT GCG TGA CAT CAA AGA GA
CCC AAG AAG GAA GGC TGG A
mFlt1
GCT TCT GGA GGA CGT CAA CA
TCC CGA TAC AGG GCT TCA GA
sFlt1
CTC CTC TGT CCA CCC AGG TA
CTG CAC TTT TGC CGT CAG TC
VegfA
TTC GTC CAA CTT CTG GGC TC
CGA GCT AGC ACT TCT CCC AG
KDR
GGA AGG CCC ATT GAG TCC AA
GTT GGT GAG GAT GAC CGT GT
FgfR1
CGT AGG CCT GTA GCT CCC TA
TGA ACT TCA CCG TCT TGG CA
Pkcα
GGA ATG AGT CCT TCA CGT TCA AA
TTA GCT CTG AGA CAC CAA AGG
MCP1 (Ccl2)
CAG GTC CCT GTC ATG CTT CT
GTG GGG CGT TAA CTG CAT CT
Vcam1
GGC TGC GAG TCA CCA TTG
GCA CAG GTA AGA GTG TTC ATT C
Icam1
GAC GCA GAG GAC CTT AAC AG
GAC GCC GCT CAG AAG AAC
Proliferation assay
4500 cells with 100 μl of growth media were seeded in a
96-well plate in 10 replicates. After serum-starvation (0.5% FCS) for 26 hours,
cells were stimulated with 5–25 ng/ml of FGF2 or VEGFA,
10% FCS or 100μg/ml of insulin. After 72 hours,
10 μl of WST-1 solution (Roche Molecular Diagnostics)
was added for 2 hours. Absorption was measured
(A450nm-A690nm) by using a Spectramax M2 reader
(Molecular Devices).
Migration assay (wound healing)
MAECs were grown to confluency, starved (0.5% FCS) for 24 hours. A straight
scratch using a 200 μl sterile tip was applied to the
confluent monolayer (Star Lab, #S1120-8810). The monolayer was stimulated with
diluent and FGF2 (25 ng/ml). The migration of the cells was
photographed with an inverted microscope (Olympus IX71) at different time points
(0, 1, 3, 6 and 9 hours after the stimulation) and measured with the software
T-Scratch® (Tobias Gebäck and Martin
Schulz, ETH Zürich, 2008).
Mouse dorsal skin fold chamber and matrigel sealing
To study the capillary remodeling and angiogenesis in vivo we used the
dorsal skin fold chamber as described previously33 with a novel
modification in order to deliver growth factors via matrigel to the tissue. For
chamber implantation, two symmetrical titanium frames were mounted on the dorsal
skin fold of the animal. One skin layer and the underlying fat were then
completely removed in a circular area of 15 mm in diameter, and the
remaining layers (consisting of striated skin muscle, subcutaneous tissue and
skin) were covered with NaCl2 0.9% and a glass cover slip
incorporated into one of the titanium frames33. The animals were
allowed to recover for two days. Skin was detached from the underlying muscle
and removed in a circular area of 7 mm in diameter from the back of
the chamber. Growth-factor reduced matrigel was mixed with FGF2
(1.5 μg/ml) and Heparin (5 IU units) or Heparin alone.
The defect on the back of the chamber was sealed with 16μl of the
matrigel mixtures, allowed to polymerize, and covered with a glass cover
slip.
Intravital microscopy
Repetitive intravital microscopic analyses of skin microvasculature were carried
out daily over a time period of 7 days. Microscopic images were taken at 8
different areas within the center and the periphery of the wound. After
injection of 0.2 ml FITC-labeled dextran (2%; MW 70000,
Sigma-Aldrich, Munich, Germany) the microcirculation was visualized by
intravital fluorescence microscopy. (Leica DM/LM; Leica Microsystems, Wetzlar,
Germany). Microscopic images were captured by a CCD television camera (Kappa
Messtechnik, Gleichen, Germany) and recorded on video (50Hz; Panasonic
AG-7350-SVHS, Tokyo, Japan) for subsequent off-line analysis. Using
×10 (N-Plan ×10/0.25 LD, Leica),
×20 (HCX Apo ×20/0.50W, Leica) objectives blood flow was
monitored in capillaries of the superficial and deep dermal plexus of the skin
muscle. The epi-illumination setup included a mercury lamp with a blue filter
(450–490 nm/>520 nm
excitation/emission wavelength) and a green filter
(530–560 nm/>580 nm).
Matrigel plug assay
The matrigel plug assay was performed as previously described78.
In brief, 8-week-old C57BL/6 mice were injected subcutaneously with
0.2 ml of matrigel containing 1.5 μg/ml bFGF
with 1 μl (5 IU) Heparin. The injected matrigel rapidly
formed a single, solid gel plug. After 7 days, mice were euthanized, the skin
was pulled back to expose the matrigel plug. The matrigel plug was removed,
photographed and fixed in formalin and paraffin embedded. Hemoglobin content was
estimated by measuring mean pixel densities from five random
200 × 200 pixel areas from the magenta
channel in CMKY converted images from each plug by the NIH ImageJ program.The Matrigel plugs were removed and fixed in 4% buffered formalin. After
48 h fixation, the plugs were trimmed, dehydrated in graded alcohol
and routinely paraffin wax embedded. Sections
(3–5 μm thick) were prepared, mounted on
glass slides, de-paraffinized in xylene, rehydrated through graded alcohols and
stained with hematoxylin and eosin (HE) for the histological examination. For
analysis of immunestainings, sections of one plug were photographed in three
different areas (350 × 350 pixels),
quantified and averaged. The n number refers to the mean of 3 areas of one plug.
E.g. for microvessel invasion n = 4/7 refers to 4 groups
of 3 averaged areas from control plugs compared to 7 groups of 3 averaged areas
from 7 Rictor ko plugs. Immunohistology for CD31 antigen was employed to
highlight endothelial cells. Anti-CD-31 immunohistochemical staining was
performed according to manufacturer’s protocol (Lifespan
Biosciences). Slides were photographed using a brightfield microscope (Zeiss
Axioskop 2, Germany). Immunohistology for the CD68 antigen was employed to
highlight cells of the monocyte/macrophage lineage79. Briefly,
sections were deparaffinized in xylene
(2 × 5 min) and rehydrated in
decreasing concentrations of ethanol
(2 × 3 min washes in 100%
ethanol, followed by 1 × 3 min
wash in 96% ethanol). Sections were washed twice with Tris-buffered saline (TBS,
0.1 M Tris–HCl with 0.9% NaCl, pH 7.4) and incubated for
1 h at 37 °C with the primary antisera
(1:100, ab125212, Clone KP1, Abcam, Cambridge, United Kingdom), after heat
pre-treatment in citrate acid (0.01M, pH 9.0) in a 97 °C
water bath for 20 min. An anti-rabbit IgG DAB detection system was
subsequently applied according to the manufacturer’s protocols
(Discovery OmniMap anti-Rb HRP, Roche, Basel, Switzerland). Sections were then
washed 3 × in TBS and
1 × in distilled water and counterstained
for 1 min with hematoxylin, followed by rinsing for
5 min in tap water and dehydration in ascending alcohols, clearing
in xylene, coverslipping and mounting. Sections of murine immune system organs
were used as positive control. All slides were scanned using digital slide
scanner NanoZoomer-XR C12000 (Hamamatsu, Japan) and images were taken using
NDP.view2 viewing software (Hamamatsu).
Statistical analysis
Statistical tests were performed by GraphPad Prism 5.04 software (San Diego, CA,
USA). On a general basis, two-way analysis of variance (ANOVA), followed by a
Bonferroni-post test comparing all pairings was calculated whereby a P value of
less than 0.05 was considered as statistically significant. For the comparison
of two groups, the unpaired t-test was used. Datapoints in graphs represent
average values ± standard error of the mean
unless otherwise stated.
Additional Information
How to cite this article: Aimi, F. et al. Endothelial Rictor is
crucial for midgestational development and sustained and extensive FGF2-induced
neovascularization in the adult. Sci. Rep.
5, 17705; doi: 10.1038/srep17705 (2015).
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