First published online 28 January 2009
doi: 10.1242/dev.028845
Development 136, 833-841 (2009)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2009
Neurovascular development uses VEGF-A signaling to regulate blood vessel ingression into the neural tube
Jennifer M. James1,
Cara Gewolb1 and
Victoria L. Bautch1,2,3,*
1 Department of Biology, The University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC
27599, USA.
2 Carolina Cardiovascular Biology Center, The University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill, NC 27599, USA.
3 Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center, The University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill, NC 27599, USA.
*
Author for correspondence (e-mail:
bautch{at}med.unc.edu)
Accepted 5 January 2009
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SUMMARY
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Neurovascular development requires communication between two developing
organs, the neuroepithelium and embryonic blood vessels. We investigated the
role of VEGF-A signaling in the embryonic crosstalk required for ingression of
angiogenic vessel sprouts into the developing neural tube. As the neural tube
develops, blood vessels enter at specific points medially and ventrally from
the surrounding perineural vascular plexus. Localized ectopic expression of
heparin-binding VEGF165 or VEGF189 from the developing avian neural tube
resulted in supernumerary blood vessel ingression points and disrupted vessel
patterning. By contrast, localized ectopic neural expression of
non-heparin-binding VEGF121 did not produce supernumerary blood vessel
ingression points, although the vessels that entered the neural tube became
dysmorphogenic. Localized loss of endogenous VEGF-A signaling in the
developing neural tube via ectopic expression of the VEGF inhibitor sFlt-1
locally blocked blood vessel ingression. The VEGF pathway manipulations were
temporally controlled and did not dramatically affect neural tube maturation
and dorsal-ventral patterning. Thus, neural-derived VEGF-A has a direct role
in the spatially localized molecular crosstalk that is required for
neurovascular development and vessel patterning in the developing neural
tube.
Key words: Vessel patterning, Vessel ingression, Neurovascular crosstalk, VEGF signaling, VEGF isoforms, Soluble Flt-1
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INTRODUCTION
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A properly patterned network of blood vessels is crucial to embryonic
development, as this network supplies nutrients and oxygen to developing organ
systems within the embryo. Embryonic blood vessels pattern reproducibly in
both space and time, indicating that molecular cues emanating from other
embryonic organs shape the vasculature and are also highly regulated (for
reviews, see Hogan and Bautch,
2004
; Coultas et al.,
2005
). Although it is known that the developing vasculature
responds to spatial cues from other embryonic structures to produce a
functional vessel network, relatively little is known about how this crosstalk
is established and regulated.
The central nervous system (CNS) is initially devoid of blood vessels and
blood vessel precursors, so communication between the developing CNS and the
developing vasculature outside the CNS is essential for proper development of
the brain and spinal cord. The brain and neural tube recruit blood vessels by
inducing the proliferation, migration and differentiation of angioblasts and
endothelial cells from the adjacent presomitic mesoderm and the lateral plate
mesoderm (Pardanaud and Dieterlen-Lievre,
1993
; Wilting et al.,
1995
; Klessinger and Christ,
1996
; Kurz et al.,
1996
; Pardanaud et al.,
1996
; Ambler et al.,
2001
; Hogan et al.,
2004
). A ring of vessels, known as the peri-neural vascular plexus
(PNVP), initially forms around the CNS. Subsequently, vessels invade the
neural tissue through angiogenic sprouting, and in avian neural tubes single
angioblast migration into the dorsal neural tube also contributes to neural
vascularization (Kurz et al.,
1996
). Thus, a vessel network is established within the developing
CNS to support further growth and development. As blood vessels enter the
neural tube, they migrate along radial glia to move inwards from the lateral
surface (Virgintino et al.,
1998
). In some areas of the CNS, the pattern of blood vessel
ingression is highly stereotypical, as originally described by Feeney and
Watterson (Feeney and Watterson,
1946
), suggesting that neural-derived spatial cues regulate the
patterning of ingressing vessels. Although there is recent evidence that
endothelial cells may respond to intrinsic transcription factor programs to
pattern in the telencephalon (Vasudevan et
al., 2008
), this paradigm is unlikely to be operative in the
neural tube where internal vessels arise from nearby surface vessels.
Several signaling pathways are involved in embryonic vascular patterning,
including VEGF-A (VEGF), Notch, ephrin and semaphorins (for reviews, see
Hogan and Bautch, 2004
;
Carmeliet and Tessier-Lavigne,
2005
; Eichmann et al.,
2005
). Target tissues produce ligands that interact with receptors
expressed on angioblasts or endothelial cells, and these interactions impart
attractive or repulsive cues that pattern blood vessels. This paradigm,
however, is difficult to demonstrate in the developing nervous system, because
most of the relevant signaling pathways have roles in both the neural and
vascular compartments (for reviews, see
Carmeliet and Tessier-Lavigne,
2005
; Lambrechts and
Carmeliet, 2006
). For example, genetic manipulation of components
of the VEGF-A (VEGF) signaling pathway indicates a positive role for the
pathway in neurovascular crosstalk, but the exact role of VEGF signaling in
vascular versus nervous tissue is unclear. Global deletion of VEGF-A or its
major signaling receptor Flk-1 (VEGFR-2) is embryonic lethal early in
development (Shalaby et al.,
1995
; Carmeliet et al.,
1996
; Ferrara et al.,
1996
), precluding analysis of neurovascular interactions.
Reduction of VEGF signaling from the developing CNS can be achieved by
conditional deletion of VEGF-A using a nestin-Cre deletor strain. This
produces a reduced density of blood vessel branching with moderate reduction
of VEGF-A signal, while a more profound reduction leads to neuronal apoptosis
and lethality (Haigh et al.,
2003
; Raab et al.,
2004
). Genetic deletion of a VEGF-A co-receptor, neuropilin 1
(NRP1), results in appropriate vessel ingression but reduced lateral branching
in the sub-ventricular zone (Gerhardt et
al., 2004
), whereas endothelial-specific deletion of NRP1 results
in large unbranched vessels in the brain, indicating a role for NRP1 in vessel
branching and morphogenesis after ingression
(Gu et al., 2003
).
VEGF-A RNA is alternatively spliced to yield several major isoforms, and
different isoforms have differential affinity for the extracellular matrix.
VEGF165 and VEGF189 interact moderately or strongly with the matrix via
heparin-binding domains, whereas VEGF121 does not have heparin-binding
properties and is more diffusible (Park et
al., 1993
). Analysis of mice that express individual VEGF-A
isoforms shows that vessel morphogenesis is affected by these perturbations
(Ruhrberg et al., 2002
;
Stalmans et al., 2002
).
VEGF120/120 embryos have larger diameter vessels that branch less often than
normal, whereas VEGF188/188 embryos have smaller diameter vessels that branch
more often than normal. However, embryos expressing single VEGF-A isoforms
supported vessel ingression into the CNS.
We have previously shown that endothelial cells of presomitic mesoderm
origin make a significant contribution to the PNVP
(Ambler et al., 2001
), and that
VEGF signaling is important in this process
(Ambler et al., 2003
;
Hogan et al., 2004
).
Ectopically grafted neural tubes recruited a PNVP, and an explant model was
used to show that neural tube derived VEGF-A is required for formation of a
vascular plexus from presomitic mesoderm. Here, we address the role of VEGF-A
signaling in the next step of neurovascular communication: the ingression of
blood vessels into the developing neural tube. We show that locally
mis-expressed heparin-binding VEGF-A isoforms induce ectopic ingression of
blood vessels into the neural tube, and that local blockade of endogenous
VEGF-A prevents vessel ingression in a spatially restricted manner. These
perturbations are temporally controlled and do not dramatically affect the
patterning of the neuronal populations of the developing neural tube,
indicating that direct communication between neural tissue and developing
vessels via VEGF-A signaling is crucial to proper and patterned blood vessel
ingression into the neural tube.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS
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Expression vectors
The human VEGF121, VEGF165 and VEGF189 cDNAs (gift of J. Abraham)
(Tischer et al., 1991
) were
inserted into the pCAGGS-IRES2-nucEGFP (pCIG) vector
(Megason and McMahon, 2002
)
(gift of L. Pevny and A. McMahon) between the PstI and SmaI
sites (VEGF121 and VEGF165) or the EcoRI and PstI sites
(VEGF189) to make the VEGF expression vectors pCIG-VEGF121, pCIG-VEGF165 and
pCIG-VEGF189. Mouse soluble Flt1 cDNA
(Kappas et al., 2008
) was
inserted into the EcoRI site of the pCIG vector, generating
pCIG-sFlt-1.
In ovo quail electroporation
Hamburger and Hamilton stage 16-18 (HH 16-18) Japanese quail embryos
(Coturnix japonica, Ozark Egg Company, Stover, MO) were electroporated in ovo
as described previously (Itasaki et al.,
1999
), with modifications. Briefly, the pCIG control vector (0.5
µg/µl), VEGF121, VEGF165, VEGF189 (0.2 µg/µl), or sFlt-1 (0.5
µg/µl) DNA was suspended in DMEM-F12 media (GIBCO, Grand Island, NY)
containing 1x penicillin/streptomycin and 50 ng/ml Fast Green (Sigma, St
Louis, MO). Approximately 1 nl was injected, to fill the posterior lumen of
the neural tube. Electroporation was with three pulses (50 milliseconds each)
of 20 mV using a BTX ECM830 Square Electroporator (Harvard Apparatus,
Holliston, MA) equipped with 3 mm gold-tipped, L-shaped BTX genetrode
electrodes (Genetronics) that flanked the neural tube. Eggshells were taped
and embryos developed an additional 48 hours at 37°C before dissection
into cold PBS. Embryos were viewed under an Olympus IX-50 epifluorescence
microscope (Opelco, Sterling, VA) to visualize DNA incorporation via GFP
expression.
Immunofluorescence and analysis of ingression patterns
At stage HH 25-26, embryos were dissected from the yolk and fixed for 1-2
hours in 4% PFA (paraformaldehyde)/PBS at 4°C, rinsed in cold PBS, then
washed for 1 hour in PBS on ice. Embryos were incubated in 30% sucrose/PBS
overnight at 4°C, then embedded in OCT media (TissueTEK, Sakura Finetek,
Torrance, CA), and 12 µm sections through the upper-limb level (thoracic
neural tube just posterior to the heart) were cut with a cryostat (Microm
HM505E, Germany). Frozen sections were washed in PBS, briefly blocked in
antibody staining solution containing: 1x PBS, 0.1% Triton X-100
(Sigma), 1% heat-inactivated goat serum (GIBCO), then incubated in antibody
staining solution and primary antibody overnight at 4°C. Monoclonal mouse
antibodies to Pax7, Pax6 and MNR2 were used at a concentration of 1:50
[obtained from the Developmental Studies Hybridoma Bank (DSHB) developed under
the auspices of the NICHD and maintained by The University of Iowa Department
of Biological Sciences, Iowa City, IA 52242]. QH1 (DSHB), transitin (DSHB) and
anti-β-Tubulin type III (Tuj1, Covance, Emeryville, CA) were used at a
concentration of 1:500. Sections were rinsed twice in antibody staining
solution, then incubated with anti-mouse IgG conjugated Cy3 (Sigma) for 2
hours at room temperature at a concentration of 1:250. Mounted sections were
visualized with an Olympus IX-50 epifluorescence microscope and images were
acquired with an Olympus DP71 digital camera (Center Valley, PA).
Ingression patterns were analyzed quantitatively as follows. A 1 mm region
of quail neural tube, starting at the upper limb, was sectioned. Cryostat
sections (12 µm) were taken at intervals of approximately 72 µm and
stained with QH1. Vessel ingression points were scored when a clear vascular
connection from the PNVP into the neural tube was noted. Angle measurements of
ingressing angiogenic sprouts were calculated for each image by drawing a
center line through the lumen of the neural tube from the floor plate to the
roof plate and locating the center point of this line. To determine the
location of angiogenic sprouts, we plotted the angle of ingression from the
initiation point of each sprout to the center, then down to the ventral-most
point. Angles were then measured using Metamorph software. The ventral-most
point along the center line is labeled 0°, whereas the dorsal-most point
is 180° (Fig. 2A). Angles
were binned into each 10° of arc. In each group, five embryos were
analyzed and the total number of ingression points in each 10° of arc
plotted on a graph.
In situ hybridization
cDNAs were generated from quail genomic DNA obtained from whole embryos (HH
23). Published quail VEGF (qVEGF) primer sequences were used to amplify
fragments of qVEGF166 cDNA (Flamme et al.,
1995
). The fragment was gel-extracted and ligated into the
pCR-Blunt II-TOPO vector (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA). Quail VEGF166 antisense
probe was amplified using the SP6 promoter according to manufacturer's
instructions (Roche, Indianapolis, IN). In situ hybridization was performed as
described (Colbert et al.,
1995
), with minor modifications, on 20 µm transverse sections
cut with a cryostat.
RNA analysis
Neural tubes electroporated on day 3 were harvested on day 5, and three to
five neural tubes/construct were pooled. Total RNA was isolated using Trizol
(Invitrogen) and cDNA was generated as described
(Kappas et al., 2008
).
Equivalent amounts of cDNA were amplified using human VEGF-A (hVEGF-A) primers
that spanned the alternative splice region, and PCR products were visualized
by agarose gel electrophoresis and normalized to GFP. The primers used were:
forward hVEGF-A, 5'-CTGCTGTCTTGGGTGCATTGG-3'; reverse hVEGF-A,
5'-TCACCGCCTCGGCTTGTC-3'; eGFP forward,
5'-CCTACGGCGTGCAGTGCTTCAGC-3'; eGFP reverse,
5'-CGGCGAGCTGCACGCTGCGTCCTC-3'.
 |
RESULTS
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Blood vessel patterning around and within the quail neural tube
Feeney and Watterson described stereotypical vessel ingression into the
embryonic chick neural tube at the cervical level from days 4-16 of
development using dye injection (Feeney and
Watterson, 1946
). Our studies focused on the thoracic level of the
quail neural tube between days 3-5 of development. To establish a
developmental time frame for major blood vessel patterning events in this area
of the neural tube, we performed a time-course analysis of blood vessel
patterning in transverse sections at stages HH 16-27, using QH1 immunostaining
to visualize both patent vessels and non-patent sprouts
(Hamburger and Hamilton, 1951
;
Pardanaud et al., 1987
)
(Fig. 1A,D,G,J,M,P). Similar to
initial neurovascular patterning events in mouse
(Hogan et al., 2004
), the
perineural vascular plexus (PNVP) begins to form first along the mid-levels of
the lateral (pial) surface of the neural tube
(Fig. 1A, arrow). As
development proceeds, the PNVP becomes progressively more complete
(Fig. 1D,G). Dorsal angioblast
migration (Fig. 1G, arrowheads)
and ventral sprouting (Fig. 1G,
arrows) were first observed at stage HH 22-24, and medial angiogenic sprouting
was first observed at stage HH 24-25 (Fig.
1J,M, arrows). Angiogenic sprouting from the PNVP never occurred
dorsal to the entry site for the DRG (dorsal root ganglia), and vessels were
never seen sprouting into the floor plate. These results are consistent with
an earlier description of developmental vessel ingression in the cervical
region of the quail embryo (Kurz et al.,
1996
) and with the work of Feeney and Watterson
(Feeney and Watterson, 1946
),
given that events occur earlier in more anterior regions of the CNS.

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Fig. 1. Formation of the PNVP and vessel ingression coordinate with neural
differentiation in the quail neural tube. HH stage 16-27 Japanese quail
embryos were sectioned in the transverse plane at the thoracic level and
stained with either QH1 (red, A,D,G,J,M,P) to label blood vessels or Tuj1
(β tubulin III, blue, B,E,H,K,N,Q) to label differentiated neurons.
Merged images (C,F,I,L,O,R) represent two super-imposed, adjacent 12 µm
sections at the upper limb level. (A-C) At stage HH 16-18, initiation
of PNVP formation correlated with the start of neuronal differentiation and
migration of Tuj1-positive neurons to the pial surface of the neural tube.
(D-F) At stage HH 19-21, the PNVP continued to develop around the
ventral neural tube, whereas motoneurons extended axonal projections from the
motor horn, and DRG axons innervated the neural tube at the dorsal root entry
zone. (G-I) By stage HH 22-24, PNVP formation was complete. Single
QH1-positive angioblasts were noted dorsally and medially (arrowheads), and
ventral angiogenic sprouts were seen (arrows) adjacent to the floor plate.
(J-L) At stage HH 24-25, angiogenic sprouts from the PNVP formed
mediolaterally (arrows) along the dorsal-ventral axis of the neural tube (this
vessel ingression site was maintained at later stages, see M and P).
(M-O) At stage HH 25-26, both ventral and medial (arrow) vessel
ingression sites were noted, along with continued differentiation of
Tuj1-positive neurons. (P-R) By stage HH 27, the amount of
Tuj1-positive neurons increased, while the vessel ingression pattern
established at earlier stages was maintained. Scale bar: 100 µm.
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β-Tubulin III was visualized by staining with the TuJ1 antibody on
adjacent sections to follow neural development. During early development the
neural tube exists primarily as a proliferating pool of neural progenitor
cells that maintain connections with both the luminal and pial surfaces of the
neural tube. As these cells undergo programmed differentiation, they lose
contact with the luminal surface of the neural tube and migrate laterally to
the pial surface, where they begin to express β-tubulin III
(Fig. 1B,E,H,K,N,Q). At these
stages, the Tuj1-positive cells are primarily neurons
(Nakai and Fujita, 1994
).
Angiogenic sprouts ingressed into the Tuj1-positive area, but only in specific
medial and ventral regions (compare Fig.
1G-R). Once in the neural tube, angiogenic sprouts avoided the
Tuj1-negative medial area that contained proliferative progenitor cells, as
described for the hindbrain (Gerhardt et
al., 2004
). These data suggest that the developing neural tube may
influence blood vessel ingression.
Blood vessel ingression into the neural tube is highly stereotypical
To determine the spatial patterning of ingressing blood vessels in the
developing neural tube, a region of the quail embryo at the upper limb level
(thoracic) was serially sectioned in the transverse plane, stained for QH1 and
analyzed as described in the Materials and methods (n=5 embryos).
Control analyses showed that the ingression points of angiogenic sprouts
within the quail neural tube were highly stereotypical
(Fig. 2A,B). Approximately 33%
of blood vessels ingressed into the neural tube between 70 and 110 degrees,
whereas the remaining 66% of vessels ingressed between 10 and 20 degrees. To
determine whether electroporation and/or expression of GFP affected the
spatial pattern of vessel ingression, quail neural tubes were electroporated
with a vector that only expressed eGFP
(Fig. 2C,D). At the time of
electroporation (HH stage 16-18, day 3), the DNA enters the cells that line
the lumen of the neural tube. The neural cells that acquire DNA are primarily
neuroepithelial and radial glia progenitor cells whose descendents form
neurons and glial cells such as astrocytes and oligodendrocytes
(Leber and Sanes, 1995
;
Gotz and Huttner, 2005
). At
this time, no blood vessel sprouts have entered the neural tube, so they are
not electroporation targets. Analysis of these embryos at HH stage 25-26 (day
5) showed that the pattern of vessel ingression was similar to that of
unperturbed controls, on both the side of the neural tube that expressed eGFP
and the contralateral side that received current but no DNA. Thus, these
technical manipulations did not affect the spatial pattern of vessel sprouting
ingression into the developing neural tube. As in ovo electroporation at these
developmental stages ultimately delivered DNA to the medial vessel ingression
area of the neural tube more efficiently than to the ventral ingression area,
medial blood vessel ingression into the neural tube was further analyzed.

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Fig. 2. Quantitative analysis of angiogenic sprouting into the developing neural
tube reveals stereotypical ingression points. Unperturbed quail embryos
and embryos whose neural tubes were electroporated with eGFP control DNA at HH
stage 16-18 were serially sectioned at stage HH 25-26 through the upper limb.
Every sixth 12 µm section was stained for QH1 (red). Fourteen images were
analyzed for each embryo as described in the Materials and methods. (A)
Unperturbed quail embryo section stained with QH1 to illustrate blood vessel
analysis strategy. (B) Total number of angiogenic sprouts within the
left (gray) and right (black) neural tube halves of five unperturbed embryos.
There were concentrations of ingression points between 0-20° (ventral
ingression points) and 70-110° (medial ingression points). (C)
Representative image of a quail neural tube electroporated with eGFP DNA
(electroporated side to the right). (D) Total number of ingressing
angiogenic sprouts within the neural tubes of five control embryos
electroporated with eGFP DNA (green); untransfected control contralateral
neural tube side (black). Scale bar: 100 µm.
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Localized mis-expression of matrix-binding VEGF isoforms alters the neural tube blood vessel ingression pattern
We hypothesized that VEGF-A expressed by the developing neural tube was
involved in the ingression of angiogenic sprouts into the tube. We confirmed
that VEGF-A was expressed in the quail neural tube at the stages analyzed (see
Fig. S1 in the supplementary material), consistent with previous reports
(Aitkenhead et al., 1998
;
Nanka et al., 2006
). The
pattern of VEGF-A RNA expression did not correlate with specific ingression
points. Rather, it was fairly uniform throughout the developing neural tube,
with a modest concentration of signal in the floor plate, roof plate and
motoneuron area, which are sites blocked to blood vessel ingression (see Fig.
S1 in the supplementary material). To analyze the role of individual VEGF
isoforms in blood vessel ingression into the developing neural tube, we
electroporated DNAs that expressed VEGF121, VEGF165 or VEGF189 from the
ubiquitous chicken β-actin promoter into stage HH 16-18 quail neural
tubes. The DNAs also expressed eGFP from an IRES sequence, so GFP-positive
cells corresponded to cells that expressed the VEGF isoforms. The amount of
DNA and the electroporation conditions were titrated to achieve moderate and
localized expression of the reporter GFP and VEGF isoform cDNAs, so that the
phenotypes could be analyzed in a spatial context. Analysis of human VEGF mRNA
in electroporated neural tubes by semi-quantitative RT-PCR indicated that
equivalent amounts of each transgene were expressed relative to the GFP signal
(see Fig. S2 in the supplementary material). Expression of VEGF121 did not
alter the vessel ingression pattern (Fig.
3A-D, n=5 embryos). The pattern was indistinguishable
from that seen on the contralateral non-electroporated side and in the
controls, although medial ingression points were scored more frequently on the
VEGF121-expressing side of the neural tube
(Fig. 3D). In some cases, the
vessels that ingressed into neural tubes expressing VEGF121 had an increased
diameter (data not shown, Fig.
4A and Fig. 5A). By
contrast, expression of similar levels of the heparin-binding VEGF-A isoforms
VEGF165 or VEGF189 induced ectopic vessel ingression points along the PNVP
(Fig. 3E-L, n=5
embryos for each group). Analysis of the ingression points in relation to the
cells expressing VEGF165 or VEGF189 showed that ectopic ingression points were
localized to areas of the neural tube that contained cells expressing the
heparin-binding VEGF isoform (Fig.
4B,C,E,F). By contrast, neural tubes with cells that ectopically
expressed VEGF121 showed blood vessel ingression only in the medial region,
despite the presence of VEGF121-expressing cells along the dorsoventral axis
of the neural tube (Fig.
4A,D).
We next analyzed several regional markers of neural tube patterning to
determine whether ectopic VEGF-A isoform expression affected neural tube
development (Fig. 5). Pax7 is
expressed in population of dorsal neural progenitors, Pax6 is expressed in a
group of medial neural progenitors and MNR2 is a marker for motoneuron
progenitors, which are localized to the ventral-most region of the developing
neural tube. The localized, moderate expression levels of the VEGF isoforms
over 48 hours did not significantly affect the expression patterns of these
markers (Fig. 5D-F,K-M,R-T).
Thus, VEGF isoforms that interact with the matrix induce ectopic blood vessel
sprouting from the PNVP into the developing neural tube and perturb vascular
patterning, without significantly affecting neural tube development on the
dorsoventral axis.
Because blood vessels migrate along radial glia once they enter the neural
tube, we asked whether electroporated neural tubes had perturbed patterning of
the radial glia. Staining with the radial glia marker transitin showed that
expression of moderate levels of any of the VEGF isoforms did not
significantly alter the staining pattern (see Fig. S3 in the supplementary
material). Moreover, the radial glia staining pattern on both the
electroporated and control sides of the neural tube suggested that radial glia
do not selectively associate with ingression points. Instead, the staining
indicated that radial glial processes are spaced relatively evenly along the
dorsal-ventral axis of the lateral edge of the neural tube (see Fig. S3 in the
supplementary material).

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Fig. 3. Ectopic expression of heparin-binding VEGF isoforms induces
supernumerary vessel ingression points into the developing neural tube.
Quail neural tubes were electroporated with hVEGF121-GFP, hVEGF165-GFP or
hVEGF189-GFP DNAs (green, panels B, F, J) on day 3 (HH 16-18) and harvested 48
hours later (HH 25-26). Transverse sections were stained with QH1 antibody
(red, panels A,E,I) to visualize vessels, and five embryos from each group
were analyzed as described (panels D,H,L; green lines, total ingression points
for ectopic VEGF-expressing sides of neural tubes at each 10° of arc;
black lines, total ingression points for contralateral control sides of the
neural tubes at each 10° of arc). C, G and K are a merge of red (QH1) and
green (eGFP) channels. (A-C) Quail neural tubes electroporated with
hVEGF121 DNA displayed a grossly normal distribution of angiogenic ingression
points along the dorsoventral axis of the ectopic VEGF-expressing side of the
neural tube (arrows in A,C). (D) The quantitative analysis showed no
change in the distribution of ingression points for sprouts between the
control (black) and VEGF121-expressing (green) sides of the neural tube, and a
slight increase in the frequency of ingression points in the medial region of
the VEGF-expressing side of the neural tubes (n=5 embryos).
(E-G) Quail neural tubes electroporated with hVEGF165 DNA had ectopic
dorsal sprouts (arrows in E,G). (H) The quantitative analysis showed
increased distribution and frequency of vessel ingression points in the dorsal
region of the hVEGF165-expressing side of the neural tube (green), where
ectopic expression is localized (n=5 embryos). (I-K) Quail
neural tubes electroporated with hVEGF189 DNA had ectopic dorsal sprouts
(arrows in I,K). (L) The quantitative analysis showed increased
distribution and frequency of vessel ingression points in the dorsal region of
the hVEGF189-expressing side of the neural tube, where ectopic expression is
localized (n=5 embryos). Scale bar: 100 µm.
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|
Loss of VEGF signaling from the neural tube blocks vessel ingression
To assess the effect of loss-of-function of the VEGF signaling pathway, we
electroporated a soluble Flt-1 (sFlt-1)-expressing cDNA into the developing
neural tube. sFlt-1 is a natural splice form of the Flt-1 receptor that can
bind and sequester VEGF-A, thus preventing binding of VEGF-A to Flk-1 and
downstream signaling (Kendall and Thomas,
1993
). In contrast to the supernumerary blood vessel ingressions
seen with VEGF isoform over-expression, localized ectopic expression of sFlt-1
led to a complete blockade of vessel ingression in areas of sFlt-1 expression
(Fig. 6, n=5 embryos).
Relative to the contralateral control side of the neural tube, the
sFlt-1-expressing side showed no ingression points in the medial area where
sFlt-1 cDNA was expressed, and reduced ingression even in the ventral area of
the developing neural tube (Fig.
6A-C,H). Expression of the VEGF-A blocking peptide over a 48-hour
period did not significantly affect the dorsoventral patterning of the neural
tube (Fig. 6D-G). These
findings indicate that endogenous VEGF-A expressed by cells of the developing
neural tube is required for the stereotypical ingression of angiogenic blood
vessels into the medial and ventral regions.
 |
DISCUSSION
|
|---|
Our results show that VEGF-A signaling is crucial to the communication
between the developing neural tube and the developing vascular system.
Moreover, here we highlight the precise choreography between neural VEGF-A
expression and blood vessel patterning, and we show that a very reproducible
pattern of blood vessel ingression depends on proper spatial regulation of
VEGF signaling from the neural compartment. The essential aspects of our model
are shown in Fig. 7. We have
previously shown that neural-tube derived VEGF-A was required for formation of
the PNVP that surrounds the developing neural tube
(Ambler et al., 2003
;
Hogan et al., 2004
)
(Fig. 7A). By manipulating
ectopic expression of VEGF-A isoforms or the sFlt-1 inhibitor in time and
space, we now reveal a second requirement for neural-derived VEGF-A in blood
vessel ingression into the developing neural tube
(Fig. 7B-E). This ingression
requires VEGF-A at the ingression sites, as local loss via sFlt expression
prevents ingression (Fig. 7E).
However, VEGF-A localization does not explain why vessels only ingress at
specific points along the dorsoventral axis. We hypothesize that stereotypical
vessel ingression into the neural tube also uses negative patterning cues
(Fig. 7B-E), and this is
discussed further below.

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Fig. 4. Localized ectopic expression of heparin-binding VEGF-A isoforms in the
developing neural tube correlates with supernumerary vessel ingression
points. Neural tubes processed for QH1 (red) and eGFP (green, reporter for
ectopic VEGF-A isoform expression) were examined for the relationship between
vessel ingression points and ectopic VEGF-A isoform expression. (A-C)
Lower power views to show location of normal (A) or supernumerary (B,C) vessel
sprout ingressions on the dorsoventral axis of the neural tube. (D-F)
Higher magnification of the boxed areas in A-C. Several eGFP-positive cells
that ectopically express heparin-binding hVEGF165 or hVEGF189 are close to the
supernumerary vessel sprouts (arrows in E,F), whereas numerous eGFP-positive
cells that ectopically express hVEGF121 (arrowheads in D) do not induce
supernumerary vessel ingression points. Scale bar: 100 µm in A-C; 50 µm
in D-F.
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Fig. 5. Neural patterning is not perturbed in neural tubes that ectopically
express VEGF-A isoforms. (A-U) Quail neural tubes were electroporated with
(A-G) hVEGF121, (H-N) hVEGF165 and (O-U) hVEGF189 on day
3 (HH 16-18), and harvested 48 hours later (HH 25-26). Neural tubes were
sectioned and adjacent sections were stained with antibodies to: QH1 (red,
A,H,O,C,J,Q) to visualize vessels; Pax7 (purple, D,K,R) to visualize dorsal
neural precursors; Pax6 (orange, E,L,S) to visualize medial neural precursors;
MNR2 (yellow, F,M,T) to visualize ventral motoneuron precursors; and Tuj1
(blue, G,N,U) to visualize differentiated neurons. (B,I,P) eGFP expression
(green) illustrates the neural tube side expressing ectopic VEGF-A isoforms
(left) versus the control contralateral side (right); (C-G,J-N,Q-U) merges of
marker and eGFP channels for each section. Scale bar: 100 µm.
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Why is it important that blood vessels sprout into the developing neural
tube at specific places? One possibility is that ingressing vessels must
coordinate with neural development and maturation to prevent mis-routing of
neural connections and disruption of fasciculation of the axon tracts. For
example, the motoneurons form in the ventral part of the neural tube, and
their axons subsequently migrate out of the neural tube ventro-laterally to
enervate their targets (for a review, see
Price and Briscoe, 2004
). As
axons leave the neural tube they form bundles, and perturbation of either
their fasciculation or egression compromises their ability to migrate and
properly connect to their targets. Thus, extensive vessel ingression at points
of motoneuron egression may compromise the function of the nervous system.
Stereotypical ingression patterns of vessels into the neural tube may also be
important for efficient functioning of the vascular system. Once angiogenic
sprouts enter the neural tube at the medial ingression point, they migrate
forward until they reach the sub-ventricular zone that separates
differentiated neurons from neural progenitors cells. When they reach this
border, they branch and migrate in both the dorsal-ventral and rostral-caudal
axes. The rostral-caudal migration leads to interconnections within the neural
tube and eventual blood flow (Feeney and
Watterson, 1946
; Nakao et al.,
1988
). These interconnections are probably made more efficiently
and sooner if the vessels are at the same level on the dorsal-ventral axis,
which is accomplished by having a defined medial ingression point.
We used a naturally produced inhibitor of VEGF-A signaling, sFlt-1, to
downregulate endogenous VEGF signaling. We and others have shown that this
spliced isoform of the sFlt-1 receptor complexes with VEGF-A and competitively
inhibits binding to Flk-1 (VEGFR-2)
(Kendall and Thomas, 1993
;
Roberts et al., 2004
;
Kappas et al., 2008
). Because
we were able to direct modest expression of sFlt-1 to localized areas within
the neural tube for a specific time period, neural degeneration was minimized
and neural development and dorsal-ventral patterning was not significantly
affected. However, even this modest blockade of VEGF-A signaling was
sufficient to block normal vessel ingression dramatically in areas of sFlt-1
expression, revealing an absolute requirement for VEGF-A signaling for proper
blood vessel ingression into the developing neural tube. Our preliminary
results show that, just as the supernumerary sprouts ingressed locally in
conjunction with ectopic VEGF-A expression, the block to ingression produced
by sFlt-1 expression was also localized and did not extend significantly
beyond areas of sFlt-1 expression (J.M.J. and V.L.B., unpublished). The
localized nature of the blockade indicates that sFlt-1 is also a local
morphogenetic mediator, as suggested by its ability to bind heparin and thus
the surrounding matrix (Park and Lee,
1999
).

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Fig. 6. VEGF signaling from the neural tube is required for blood vessel
ingression. Quail neural tubes were electroporated with sFlt1-GFP and
analyzed as previously described. (A-C) No medial vessel ingression and
little ventral vessel ingression was seen in areas of the neural tube that
were eGFP positive. (D-G) Neural patterning is not detectably perturbed
on the electroporated side of the neural tube (left) based on Pax7 (D,
purple), Pax6 (E, orange), MNR2 (F, yellow) and Tuj1 (G, blue) expression
patterns. (H) Quantitative analysis of five electroporated neural tubes
showed no medial and few ventral vessel ingression points in areas of
localized sFlt1 expression (green), compared with the control contralateral
side (black) (n=5 embryos). Scale bar: 100 µm.
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Fig. 7. Model of blood vessel ingression into the developing neural tube.
The model covers events of neurovascular patterning between stages HH 16 and
HH 26 in the avian embryo, and also shows the VEGF-A perturbations analyzed in
this study. (A) At early stages (HH 16-18), VEGF-A isoforms (121, 165,
189) expressed by the developing neural tube set up a gradient that leads to
angioblast migration from the lateral plate and presomitic mesoderm to form
the PNVP. At this stage, blood vessel ingression does not occur because of
insufficient levels of neural tube-derived VEGF-A. (B) At later stages
(HH 22-25), increased levels of VEGF165 and VEGF189 are required for blood
vessel ingression, but negative patterning cues that are co-expressed prevent
ingression except at specific medial and ventral points. (C) By stage
HH 26 there are obvious stereotypical blood vessel ingression points medially
and ventrally, whereas angioblasts migrate in dorsally. (D) Neural
tubes electroporated with VEGF165 or VEGF 189 show ectopic ingression in
normally avascular dorsal areas on the electroporated side. (E) Neural
tubes electroporated with sFlt-1 do not have ingression at the normal medial
site on the electroporated side. For each set of panels, the left side
demonstrates the signals and the right side demonstrates the vessel patterning
outcome. Symbols are described in the key below the figure.
|
|
Localized ectopic expression of the three major VEGF-A isoforms revealed
that, although all isoforms perturbed neural tube angiogenesis, VEGF165 and
VEGF189 but not VEGF121 were able to induce supernumerary sprouts at locations
along the periphery that normally did not allow for sprout ingression. There
are two major differences between these VEGF isoforms. VEGF165 and 189 bind
heparin and thus can interact with the matrix, whereas VEGF121 does not bind
heparin. VEGF165 and presumably VEGF189 can use NRP1 as a co-receptor to
enhance signaling through the Flk-1 (VEGFR-2) receptor, whereas VEGF121 binds
NRP1 but does not use it as a co-receptor for signaling through VEGFR-2
(Soker et al., 1998
;
Pan et al., 2007
). Deletion of
NRP1 affects vascular development
(Kawasaki et al., 1999
;
Gu et al., 2003
;
Gerhardt et al., 2004
).
However, ingression of vessels into the CNS is not compromised; the vessel
defects in NRP1 mutant neural tubes result from mis-patterning in lateral
branching and vessel size increases, indicating that neural tube vessel
ingression is not NRP1 dependent (Gu et
al., 2003
; Gerhardt et al.,
2004
). Our preliminary results show that co-electroporation of
VEGF165 and a soluble form of NRP1 that is predicted to act as a
dominant-negative block to NRP1/Flk-1 interactions does not block ectopic
ingression of vascular sprouts (J.M.J. and V.L.B., unpublished). Taken
together, these findings suggest that NRP1 interactions are not crucial to
blood vessel ingression into the neural tube, and that the heparin-binding
properties of VEGF165 and 189 confer on these isoforms the ability to induce
ectopic ingression points.
The hypothesis that VEGF isoform interactions with the local matrix within
the neural tube are crucial to proper vessel ingression is also supported by
our finding that ectopic sprouting ingression is localized to areas of the
neural tube that contain cells expressing either VEGF165 or VEGF189. When
broad areas expressed heparin-binding VEGF ectopically, there were numerous
sprouts in these areas. However, even when only a few cells expressed
heparin-binding VEGF DNA, supernumerary sprouts correlated with their
placement. This finding strongly indicates that heparin-binding VEGF-A is
normally deposited near the cells of origin in the neural tube, and this
spatial arrangement of VEGF-A contributes to the stereotypical ingression
pattern. It also shows that endothelial cells outside the neural tube can
sense sources of VEGF-A within the neural tube, over multiple cell diameters,
and can overcome normal restraints to ingression if the positive signal is
strong enough. Although it is formally possible that VEGF-A signaling could
travel over space via a relay system from a localized ligand source, existing
data suggest that the gradient hypothesis of VEGF-A signaling is responsible
for our findings. This model proposes that a gradient of VEGF-A protein
emanating from a source provides a haptotactic slope that directs the
migration of angiogenic sprouts. Support for this model was provided by
Ruhrberg and colleagues, who showed that VEGF-A protein is concentrated at the
midline of the developing hindbrain and decreases in lateral areas
(Ruhrberg et al., 2002
). The
use of a VEGF-A gradient for blood vessel ingression into the developing
neural tube is also consistent with our finding that ectopic expression of
VEGF121 is not capable of inducing supernumerary vessel ingression points,
although once in the neural tube vessels exposed to ectopic VEGF121 become
dysmorphogenic. However, mice that express only VEGF120 still exhibit
ingression of angiogenic vessels into the developing neural tube
(Ruhrberg et al., 2002
),
although ingression is delayed and ingression points are less dense than in
controls (J.M.J. and V.L.B., unpublished). This finding contrasts with our
results showing that ectopic expression of VEGF121 does not result in
supernumerary vessel ingression into the neural tube. One explanation of this
paradox is that in the absence of normal VEGF-A isoforms, VEGF120 forms a
`soluble' gradient from its source that can provide instructional information
for endothelial sprout migration, although with less efficiency than a
gradient formed by heparin-binding VEGF-A isoforms. However, when VEGF121 is
overexpressed in the context of a normal gradient it cannot contribute
significantly to the positional information conveyed by that gradient.
A model of patterned vessel ingression into the neural tube that only
considers VEGF-A, however, is obviously not sufficient to explain the
stereotypical pattern we observed. VEGF-A RNA expression is not localized to
areas of ingression, but is broadly expressed, with no observable differences
along the dorsal-ventral axis at stages when blood vessels ingress at specific
medial locations. Moreover, staining for the heparan sulfate proteoglycans
that bind VEGF165 and VEGF189 showed uniform expression along the lateral edge
of the neural tube, suggesting that VEGF protein is not preferentially
localized to ingression points via matrix binding (J.M.J. and V.L.B.,
unpublished). We thus conclude that VEGF-A is necessary but not sufficient to
pattern the angiogenic blood vessels that enter the developing neural tube.
Although it is formally possible that the endothelial cells at the ingression
points are uniquely able to respond to the VEGF-A signal due to
cell-autonomous differences between them and neighboring endothelial cells,
our data do not support such a model, as all PNVP endothelial cells seem
capable of responding to ectopic expression of heparin-binding VEGF-A.
Likewise, a model whereby egression of motor neurons and/or ingression of DRG
neurons physically blocks blood vessel ingression does not account for the
extensive areas of the floor plate, ventral neural tube, and dorsal neural
tube that do not support ingression of the adjacent PNVP vessels. Our data
best support a model in which the positive signals emanating from the neural
tube are balanced by negative spatial cues that are also produced by the
neural tube and prevent ingression both dorsally and ventrally
(Fig. 7B-E). Several signaling
pathways are candidates to coordinate with VEGF signaling to pattern vessel
ingression into the neural tube, based on the expression of the ligands and
their ability to negatively influence vessel migration (see review by
Eichmann et al., 2005
). Among
these are the semaphorins that signal through plexins, the slits that signal
through robo receptors and netrins that signal through UNC and DCC receptors.
Thus, VEGF-A signaling is predicted to provide a positive spatial cue that,
when balanced by a negative spatial cue, is neutralized. However, this balance
can be tipped in favor of VEGF-A and vessel ingression by ectopic expression
of VEGF-A. In our model endothelial cells are capable of a sophisticated
reading of incoming cues, and of integrating these cues to produce a behavior
that leads to proper neurovascular communication. Moreover, pathologies such
as the CCMs (cerebral cavernous malformations) disrupt a unique communication
between the neural and vascular compartment (for reviews, see
McCarty, 2005
;
Lok et al., 2007
) that begins
at the earliest stages of development.
Supplementary material
Supplementary material for this article is available at
http://dev.biologists.org/cgi/content/full/136/5/833/DC1
 |
Footnotes
|
|---|
We thank Yongquin Wu and the UNC Neurobiology Core for performing the in
situ hybridizations, Andy McMahon and Larysa Pevny for the pCIG expression
vector, Judith Abraham for the VEGF isoform cDNAs, and Eva Anton for the use
of his cryostat. We thank Larysa Pevny and Anthony LaMantia for critical
comments on the manuscript, and Daniel Meechan and members of the Bautch
laboratory for discussions. This work was supported by grants from the
NIH
(HL43174 and HL86564) to V.L.B.,
by T32 (HL69768)
NIH Pre-doctoral training
grant (J.M.J.) and by a UNC Summer Undergraduate Research
Fellowship (S.U.R.F.) to C.G. Deposited in PMC for release
after 12 months.
 |
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