Matrix stiffness controls lymphatic vessel formation through regulation of a GATA2-dependent transcriptional program
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Maike Frye Andrea Taddei Cathrin Dierkes Ines Martinez-Corral Matthew Fielden Henrik Ortsäter Jan Kazenwadel Dinis Calado Pia Ostergaard Marjo Salminen Liqun He Natasha L Harvey Friedemann Kiefer Taija MäkinenAbstract
Tissue and vessel wall stiffening alters endothelial cell properties and contributes to vascular dysfunction. However, whether extracellular matrix (ECM) stiffness impacts vascular development is not known. Here we show that matrix stiffness controls lymphatic vascular morphogenesis. Atomic force microscopy measurements in mouse embryos reveal that venous lymphatic endothelial cell (LEC) progenitors experience a decrease in substrate stiffness upon migration out of the cardinal vein, which induces a GATA2-dependent transcriptional program required to form the first lymphatic vessels. Transcriptome analysis shows that LECs grown on a soft matrix exhibit increased GATA2 expression and a GATA2-dependent upregulation of genes involved in cell migration and lymphangiogenesis, including VEGFR3. Analyses of mouse models demonstrate a cell-autonomous function of GATA2 in regulating LEC responsiveness to VEGF-C and in controlling LEC migration and sprouting in vivo. Our study thus uncovers a mechanism by which ECM stiffness dictates the migratory behavior of LECs during early lymphatic development.
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Journal Nature Communications
Volume 9
Issue number 1
Pages 1511
Available online
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Publisher website (DOI) 10.1038/s41467-018-03959-6
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Europe PubMed Central 29666442
Pubmed 29666442
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