| Literature DB >> 8602241 |
P Carmeliet1, V Ferreira, G Breier, S Pollefeyt, L Kieckens, M Gertsenstein, M Fahrig, A Vandenhoeck, K Harpal, C Eberhardt, C Declercq, J Pawling, L Moons, D Collen, W Risau, A Nagy.
Abstract
The endothelial cell-specific vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and its cellular receptors Flt-1 and Flk-1 have been implicated in the formation of the embryonic vasculature. This is suggested by their colocalized expression during embryogenesis and the impaired vessel formation in Flk-1 and Flt-1 deficient embryos. However, because Flt-1 also binds placental growth factor, a VEGF homologue, the precise role of VEGF was unknown. Here we report that formation of blood vessels was abnormal, but not abolished, in heterozygous VEGF-deficient (VEGF+/-) embryos, generated by aggregation of embryonic stem (ES) cells with tetraploid embryos (T-ES) and even more impaired in homozygous VEGF-deficient (VEGF-/-) T-ES embryos, resulting in death at mid-gestation. Similar phenotypes were observed in F1-VEGF+/- embryos, generated by germline transmission. We believe that this heterozygous lethal phenotype, which differs from the homozygous lethality in VEGF-receptor-deficient embryos, is unprecedented for a targeted autosomal gene inactivation, and is indicative of a tight dose-dependent regulation of embryonic vessel development by VEGF.Entities:
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Year: 1996 PMID: 8602241 DOI: 10.1038/380435a0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962