| Literature DB >> 31406962 |
Hualong Bai1,2,3, Jianming Guo2, Shirley Liu2, Xiangjiang Guo2, Haidi Hu2, Tun Wang2, Toshihiko Isaji2, Shun Ono2, Bogdan Yatsula2, Ying Xing3, Alan Dardik1,4.
Abstract
Vascular identity is genetically determined, but can be altered during surgical procedures. We hypothesized that the environment of the procedure critically alters the identity of autologous tissue patches implanted into the arterial or venous environment. Autologous jugular vein or carotid artery was used as a patch to repair a rat aorta or inferior vena cava. In the aortic environment patches contained neointimal cells that were CD34/Ephrin-B2-dual positive but not CD34/Eph-B4-dual positive; patches expressed Ephrin-B2, notch-4 and dll-4 but not Eph-B4 and COUP-TFII. In the venous environment patches contained neointimal cells that were CD34/Eph-B4-dual positive but not CD34/Ephrin-B2-dual positive; patches expressed Eph-B4 and COUP-TFII but not Ephrin-B2, notch-4 and dll-4. These data show that autologous tissue patches heal by acquisition of the vascular identity determined by the environment into which they are implanted, suggesting some plasticity of adult vascular identity.Entities:
Keywords: Patch; artery; endothelial cell; patch angioplasty; vascular identity; vein
Year: 2018 PMID: 31406962 PMCID: PMC6690610 DOI: 10.4103/VIT.VIT_9_18
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vasc Investig Ther ISSN: 2589-9481