Anti-VEGF therapy reduces intestinal inflammation in Endoglin heterozygous mice subjected to experimental colitis

被引:0
|
作者
Daniela S. Ardelean
Melissa Yin
Mirjana Jerkic
Madonna Peter
Bo Ngan
Robert S. Kerbel
F. Stuart Foster
Michelle Letarte
机构
[1] The Hospital for Sick Children,Molecular Structure and Function Program, Peter Gilgan Centre for Research and Learning
[2] The Hospital for Sick Children,Division of Rheumatology
[3] University of Toronto,Department of Immunology
[4] Sunnybrook Health Sciences Center,Biological Sciences
[5] University of Toronto,Heart and Stroke Richard Lewar Centre of Excellence
[6] The Hospital for Sick Children,Division of Pathology
[7] University of Toronto,Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathobiology
[8] University of Toronto,Department of Medical Biophysics
来源
Angiogenesis | 2014年 / 17卷
关键词
Endoglin; VEGF; Inflammation; Angiogenesis; Anti-VEGF therapy;
D O I
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Chronic intestinal inflammation is associated with pathological angiogenesis that further amplifies the inflammatory response. Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), is a major angiogenic cytokine that has been implicated in chronic colitis and inflammatory bowel diseases. Endoglin (CD105), a transforming growth factor-β superfamily co-receptor expressed on endothelial and some myeloid cells, is a modulator of angiogenesis involved in wound healing and potentially in resolution of inflammation. We showed previously that Endoglin heterozygous (Eng+/−) mice subjected to dextran sodium sulfate developed severe colitis, abnormal colonic vessels and high tissue VEGF. We therefore tested in the current study if treatment with a monoclonal antibody to VEGF could ameliorate chronic colitis in Eng+/− mice. Tissue inflammation and microvessel density (MVD) were quantified on histological slides. Colonic wall thickness, microvascular hemodynamics and targeted MAdCAM-1+ inflamed vessels were assessed in vivo by ultrasound. Mediators of angiogenesis and inflammation were measured by Milliplex and ELISA assays. Colitic Eng+/− mice showed an increase in intestinal inflammation, MVD, colonic wall thickness, microvascular hemodynamics and the number of MAdCAM-1+ microvessels relative to colitic Eng+/+ mice; these parameters were all attenuated by anti-VEGF treatment. Of all factors up-regulated in the inflamed gut, granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) and amphiregulin were further increased in colitic Eng+/− versus Eng+/+ mice. Anti-VEGF therapy decreased tissue VEGF and inflammation-induced endoglin, IL-1β and G-CSF in colitic Eng+/− mice. Our results suggest that endoglin modulates intestinal angiogenic and inflammatory responses in colitis. Furthermore, contrast-enhanced ultrasound provides an excellent non-invasive imaging modality to monitor gut angiogenesis, inflammation and responses to anti-angiogenic treatment.
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页码:641 / 659
页数:18
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