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Development 129, 973-982 (2002)
© 2002 The Company of Biologists Limited

Patterning of angiogenesis in the zebrafish embryo

Sarah Childs*, Jau-Nian Chen{dagger}, Deborah M. Garrity and Mark C. Fishman{ddagger}

Cardiovascular Research Center, Massachusetts General Hospital, and Harvard Medical School, 149 13th St. Charlestown, MA 02129, USA
* Present address: Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary AB, Canada, T2N 4N1
{dagger} Present address: Department of Molecular, Cell and Developmental Biology, UCLA, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA

{ddagger}Author for correspondence (e-mail: fishman{at}cvrc.mgh.harvard.edu)

Accepted 16 November 2001

Little is known about how vascular patterns are generated in the embryo. The vasculature of the zebrafish trunk has an extremely regular pattern. One intersegmental vessel (ISV) sprouts from the aorta, runs between each pair of somites, and connects to the dorsal longitudinal anastomotic vessel (DLAV). We now define the cellular origins, migratory paths and cell fates that generate these metameric vessels of the trunk. Additionally, by a genetic screen we define one gene, out of bounds (obd), that constrains this angiogenic growth to a specific path.

We have performed lineage analysis, using laser activation of a caged dye and mosaic construction to determine the origin of cells that constitute the ISV. Individual angioblasts destined for the ISVs arise from the lateral posterior mesoderm (LPM), and migrate to the dorsal aorta, from where they migrate between somites to their final position in the ISVs and dorsal longitudinal anastomotic vessel (DLAV). Cells of each ISV leave the aorta only between the ventral regions of two adjacent somites, and migrate dorsally to assume one of three ISV cell fates. Most dorsal is a T-shaped cell, based in the DLAV and branching ventrally; the second constitutes a connecting cell; and the third an inverted T-shaped cell, based in the aorta and branching dorsally. The ISV remains between somites during its ventral course, but changes to run mid-somite dorsally. This suggests that the pattern of ISV growth ventrally and dorsally is guided by different cues.

We have also performed an ENU mutagenesis screen of 750 mutagenized genomes and identified one mutation, obd that disrupts this pattern. In obd mutant embryos, ISVs sprout precociously at abnormal sites and migrate anomalously in the vicinity of ventral somite. The dorsal extent of the ISV is less perturbed. Precocious sprouting can be inhibited in a VEGF morphant, but the anomalous site of origin of obd ISVs remains. In mosaic embryos, obd somite causes adjacent wild-type endothelial cells to assume the anomalous ISV pattern of obd embryos.

Thus, the launching position of the new sprout and its initial trajectory are directed by inhibitory signals from ventral somites. Zebrafish ISVs are a tractable system for defining the origins and fates of vessels, and for dissecting elements that govern patterns of vessel growth.

Key words: Zebrafish, Angiogenesis, Vascular pattern







© The Company of Biologists Ltd 2002