| Literature DB >> 27014075 |
Myra N Chávez1, Geraldine Aedo2, Fernando A Fierro3, Miguel L Allende2, José T Egaña4.
Abstract
Angiogenesis is the process through which new blood vessels are formed from preexisting ones and plays a critical role in several conditions including embryonic development, tissue repair and disease. Moreover, enhanced therapeutic angiogenesis is a major goal in the field of regenerative medicine and efficient vascularization of artificial tissues and organs is one of the main hindrances in the implementation of tissue engineering approaches, while, on the other hand, inhibition of angiogenesis is a key therapeutic target to inhibit for instance tumor growth. During the last decades, the understanding of cellular and molecular mechanisms involved in this process has been matter of intense research. In this regard, several in vitro and in vivo models have been established to visualize and study migration of endothelial progenitor cells, formation of endothelial tubules and the generation of new vascular networks, while assessing the conditions and treatments that either promote or inhibit such processes. In this review, we address and compare the most commonly used experimental models to study angiogenesis in vitro and in vivo. In particular, we focus on the implementation of the zebrafish (Danio rerio) as a model to study angiogenesis and discuss the advantages and not yet explored possibilities of its use as model organism.Entities:
Keywords: Danio rerio; angiogenesis assay; endothelial markers; high-throughput screening assays; vascular development; vessel regeneration
Year: 2016 PMID: 27014075 PMCID: PMC4781882 DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2016.00056
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Physiol ISSN: 1664-042X Impact factor: 4.566
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| Proliferation (reviewed by Stoddart, | Cell number | The effect of test substance is measured by estimation of the increase in viable endothelial cell number over time | Staton et al., | |
| Cell cycle kinetics | BrdU assay | Bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU), a pyrimidine analog, is incorporated during DNA synthesis and quantified by immunohistochemistry or ELISA | Qin et al., | |
| Proliferation marker detection assay | Ki-67, expressed during the S, G2 and M phases, or the proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA), overexpressed in the G1 and S-phase are estimated quantitatively | Whitfield et al., | ||
| Metabolism | Tetrazolium salt-assays | Metabolically active cells convert tetrazolium-salt compounds (MTT, XTT, MTS and WST1) into formazan dyes. The colorimetric change is quantified using spectrophotometry and correlated to cell number | Boncler et al., | |
| Protease activity assay | Protease activity measured using a fluorogenic cell permeable substrate (glycyl-phenylalanyl-aminofluorocoumarin; GF-AFC) is correlated to viable cell-number | Niles et al., | ||
| Resazurin assay: | Metabolically active cells reduce resazurin to resorufin, changing the spectrometric properties of the compound. Signal is quantified and correlated with cell number | Larson et al., | ||
| ATP-measurement | Bioluminescence-based ATP-detection assay that uses the linear relationship between viable cell number and ATP-concentration | Wang et al., | ||
| Cell death | TUNEL-assay | Fluorescent labeling of terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-dUTP nick end of the 3′-OH region of fragmented DNA is estimated by microscopy or flow cytometry | Goodwin, | |
| Apoptosis marker detection assay | Expression of apoptosis cell-markers, such as caspase-3 or annexin V, is assessed via microscopy or flow cytometry | Köhler et al., | ||
| LDH assay: | The release of lactate dehyrogenase (LDH) as a consequence of loss of cell membrane integrity can be quantified to through a colorimetric reaction | Smith et al., | ||
| Migration (reviewed by Hulkower and Herber, | Wound assay | Scratch assay | A tip or needle is used to remove cells to form a denuded area in a confluent endothelial cell monolayer, in which cell migration can be quantitatively estimated after a specific time interval | Steinritz et al., |
| Exclusion zone assay | Stencils are placed in culture plates prior to cell-seeding in order to create uniformly sized wounds in an intact confluent monolayer, in which invasion by the patterned cells can be quantitatively assessed | Gough et al., | ||
| Chemotaxis/ chemoinvasion | Boyden chamber assay | Two-compartment chamber with a semi-permeable membrane is used to evaluate active cell migration in response to specific stimuli or due to chemotaxis within a test substance gradient | Albini and Benelli, | |
| Microfluidics assay | Creation of a diffusion-generated concentration gradient within a migration chamber, through which endothelial cells can migrate | Chung et al., | ||
| Morphogenesis (reviewed by Arnaoutova and Kleinman, | Tubule formation | 2D-tubule formation assay | Endothelial cells are platelet on an extracellular matrix and monitored for their ability to form vessel-like tubules | Arnaoutova and Kleinman, |
| EC-aggregate reassembling assay | Endothelial cell spheroids or aggregates are embedded in an extracellular matrix that resembles the basement membrane environment. Upon stimulation, vessels sprout into the matrix | Li and Stuhlmann, | ||
| 3D-tubule formation assay | Endothelial cells are seeded in a three-dimensional culture platform that involves extracellular matrix components and/or other cell-types. Different settings allow to study sprouting, formation, stabilization and maturation of vessel-like tubules | Hetheridge et al., |
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| Rat aortic ring assay | Thoracic aorta is dissected, cleaned and cut into rings. Upon serum-starvation, rings are embedded in extracellular matrix components in the presence or absence of the test compound. Exponential vessel outgrowth from the explant of the tubule structures is observed within 10 days | Many rings available from few animals. Supporting cells are included in the formation of vessels. Visible lumenized tubule structures develop over a time course similar to that | Nicosia, |
| Mouse aortic ring assay | Cost-efficient transgenic mouse technologies and gene manipulation available. Implementable for high-quality imaging and high-throughput screening | Baker et al., | |
| Miniature ring-supported gel assay | Isolated aortae segments are placed in low volume three-dimensional collagen gel supports, which are casted by a nylon mesh ring that improves the stability of the setting | Optimized system allows better specimen handling, staining, imaging, and a more economical use of extracellular matrix reagents | Reed et al., |
| Human arterial ring assay | Human umbilical arteries are isolated from umbilical cords, sectioned into rings, and then embedded in extracellular matrix. Tubular structures are quantified by image analysis | Provides a three-dimensional system for identification of genes and drugs that regulate human angiogenesis | Seano et al., |
| Retinal explant assay | Explanted retina is cut and placed, over a three-dimensional gel with the photoreceptor layer facing upward. Endothelial cell sprouting is observed from day 3 and peaks at day 7 | Allows the study of tip endothelial cell angiogenic responses and acute responses of retinal blood vessels at the sprouting front | Rezzola et al., |
| Fat-tissue microfragment assay | Human subcutaneous fat tissue is fragmented and embedded in fibrin. Blood vessel growth and elongation is examined after 15 days by microscopy | Uses intact human fat tissue with quiescent vessels from which other spontaneously derive. Assay could help predict response toward a treatment | Greenway et al., |
| Choroid sprouting assay | The choroid, a vascular bed beneath the retinal pigment epithelium, is separated from the retina, segmented, and placed over a matrix. Outgrowth of vascular sprouts can be observed within 2-6 days. | Vascular sprouts consist of endothelial cells, pericytes and macrophages. Robust, reproducible and representative model of microvascular angiogenesis Semi-automated software for quantification of sprouting area is available | Shao et al., |
Transgenic zebrafish lines generated for the study and visualization of the vascular system.
| Pan- endothelial | Lenard et al., | ||
| Endocardial and myocardial cells | Heicklen-Klein and Evans, | ||
| Endothelial cells | Sacilotto et al., | ||
| Artery | Swift et al., | ||
| Endothelial cells, cytoplasmic | Lawson and Weinstein, | ||
| Endothelial cells, nuclear | Roman et al., | ||
| Pan-endothelial | Hogan et al., | ||
| Blood cells | Traver et al., | ||
| Erythroid lineage | Long et al., | ||
| Blood cells | Traver et al., | ||
| Perivascular | Wang et al., | ||
| Angioblast/endothelial precursors | Jin et al., | ||
| Angioblast/endothelial precursors | Cross et al., | ||
| Angioblast/endothelial precursors | Huang et al., | ||
| Myocardial cells | Ho et al., | ||
| Artery | Choe and Crump, | ||
| Endothelial cells (intermediate) | Zhen et al., | ||
| Endothelial cells (anterior-posterior) | Zhen et al., | ||
| Endothelial cells | Motoike et al., | ||
| Pan- endothelial | Bussmann and Schulte-Merker, | ||
| Pan- endothelial | Bussmann et al., | ||
| Endothelial cells | Hermkens et al., | ||
| Pan-endothelial | Gordon et al., | ||
| Strong expression in arterial ISV | Bussmann et al., |
Adapted from Baldessari and Mione (.
Zebrafish vascular mutants.
| Lack endothelial and circulating blood cells | Stainier et al., | ||
| Neuronal-cadherin (N-cadherin/Cdh2)-deficient zebrafish show dysmorphic vascular network | Bagatto et al., | ||
| Lack trunk and tail circulation due to reduced arterial gene expression and improper assembly of the dorsal and lateral aortae | Lawson et al., | ||
| Morphological cardiovascular defects | Mably et al., | ||
| Branchial arteries fail to form properly. Arterial-venous shunts lead to loss of circulation in the trunk | Chen et al., | ||
| Abnormal ocular blood vessels cause failure of optic fissure closure | Weiss et al., | ||
| Mutants are defective for Notch signaling, exhibit arterial-venous shunts, defective PCV formation, and reduced arterial gene expression | Lawson et al., | ||
| Display premature sprouting and mispatterned growth of the trunk intersegmental vessels due to loss of semaphorin–plexin signaling pathway | Childs et al., | ||
| Deficient in VEGF-mediated angiogenesis and arterial differentiation | Lawson et al., | ||
| Severe dilation of major blood vessels, followed by a thinning of cell walls | Mably et al., | ||
| Loss of angioblasts and failure to undergo angiogenesis | Habeck et al., | ||
| Segmental artery mutants | Vascular mutants identified by haploid transgenic screening show defects in Vegf/Plcg1 signaling | Covassin et al., | |
| Defects in trunk circulation due to abnormal arterial differentiation | Lawson et al., | ||
| Mutant shows excessive sprouting angiogenesis due to loss of apolipoprotein-B regulation | Avraham-Davidi et al., | ||
| Enhancement of junctional integrity via VE-cadherin | Gjini et al., | ||
| Altered endothelial junctional integrity causes dilation of major vessels. | Mably et al., | ||
| Failure to form established junctions during anastomosis | Lenard et al., | ||
| VEGF-receptor mutants | Mutants identified in a forward genetic screen show disrupted blood vessels sprouting of normal angioblasts | Habeck et al., | |
| Increased VEGF-signaling induces aberrant angiogenic sprouts and retinal neovascularization | van Rooijen et al., | ||
| Mutants develop severe edema, associated with an abnormal blood circulation and improper arterial-venous connections | Roman et al., |
Adapted from Lagendijk et al. (.
Figure 1In the transgenic zebrafish line Tg(fli1:EGFP). This allows the visualization, and hence the analysis of the vasculature during zebrafish embryonic development (A, Lawson and Weinstein, 2002a), and during adult vessel regeneration upon tail fin amputation (B, Huang et al., 2003). Scale bar represents 500 μm in (A), and 1 mm in (B).