Volume 52 (8): 1063-1072, 2004 Copyright ©The Histochemical Society, Inc. Immunohistochemical Identification of an Extracellular Matrix Scaffold that Microguides Capillary Sprouting In Vivo
Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Virginia Health Sciences Center, Charlottesville, Virginia Correspondence to: Richard J. Price, PhD, Dept. of Biomedical Engineering, Box 800759, UVA Health System, Charlottesville, VA 22908. E-mail: rprice{at}virginia.edu
To gain insight into how a naturally occurring scaffold composed of extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins provides directional guidance for capillary sprouting, we examined angiogenesis in whole-mount specimens of rat mesentery. Angiogenesis was studied in response to normal maturation, the injection of a mast cell degranulating substance (compound 48/80), and mild wounding. Confocal microscopy of specimens immunolabeled for elastin revealed a network of crosslinked elastic fibers with a density of 140.8 ± 37 mm of fiber/mm2 tissue. Fiber diameters ranged from 180 to 1400 nm, with a mean value of 710 ± 330 nm. Capillary sprouts contained CD31- and OX-43-positive endothelial cells as well as desmin-positive pericytes. During normal maturation, leading endothelial cells and pericytes were in contact and aligned with an elastic fiber in 8090% of all sprouts. In wounding and compound 48/80-treated specimens, in which angiogenesis was markedly increased, leading endothelial cells remained in contact and aligned with elastic fibers in 6080% of all sprouts. These observations indicate that elastic fibers are used for endothelial and pericyte migration during capillary sprouting in rat mesentery. The composition of this elastic fiber matrix may provide important clues for the development of tissue-engineered scaffolds that support and directionally guide angiogenesis. (J Histochem Cytochem 52:10631072, 2004)
Key Words: angiogenesis microvascular remodeling microcirculation elastin tissue engineering
IN RECENT YEARS, the roles of many growth factors and extracellular matrix (ECM) components in mediating the migration, proliferation, and differentiation of vascular cells during angiogenesis have been elucidated. One particularly important area of angiogenesis research has focused on the adhesion of cells to the ECM. Pioneering studies demonstrated an essential role for the v-integrins, which bind to RGD recognition sites in ECM proteins, such as vitronectin, fibronectin, and fibrillin, during angiogenesis in response to the application of both VEGF and bFGF (Friedlander et al. 1995 1ß1- and 2ß1-integrins, which have affinity for collagen, can also be critical for angiogenesis (Senger et al. 1997
Understanding the structure and composition of an in vivo angiogenesis scaffold may also be beneficial for the field of tissue engineering, in which three-dimensional tissue constructs and implants often fail due to insufficient oxygenation caused by incomplete or absent vascularization. To date, many tissue-engineered constructs have been generated to support neovascularization, either within the construct itself (Richardson et al. 2001
Angiogenesis Models All animal studies were approved by the Animal Research Committee at the University of Virginia and conformed to the American Heart Association Guidelines for the Use of Animals in Research. Angiogenesis was studied in rat mesentery during normal development and in response to both wound healing and the direct application of compound 48/80, a substance that degranulates mast cells. During normal development, microvessel networks develop in previously avascular tissue via capillary sprouting from vessels in the surrounding fat (Hansen-Smith et al. 1994
Tissue Harvest and Immunochemistry
Specimen Analysis
In previous studies, we noted that capillary sprout endothelial cells from highly angiogenic tissues exhibit phenotypic differences that depend on the position of the sprout within the network (Anderson et al. 2004 For studies examining the density and diameter of the elastic fiber matrix, low (x10)- and high (x180)-magnification confocal images from mesenteric windows of normally developing young adult animals were acquired using a BioRad MicroRadiance confocal scanner attached to the Nikon TE-300 microscope. Elastic fiber densities were determined by thresholding and skeletonizing the low-magnification images using Image J software, which is available for download from the National Institutes of Health (http://rsb.info.nih.gov/ij/). Skeletonized images were used to compute the total number of pixels per image, which, in turn, was converted into the total length of elastic fiber per unit area of mesenteric tissue. Elastic fiber diameters were measured directly from high-magnification confocal images with the use of Image J software. The x180 magnification images were generated using the x60 objective and a x3 electronic zoom on the confocal microscope.
Figure 1 depicts representative mesenteric microvascular networks at the time of tissue harvest. As expected, vessel density and capillary sprouting were significantly increased in both wound-healing (Figure 1C) and compound 48/80treated mesenteries (Figure 1D) in comparison to both their weight-matched young adult controls (Figure 1B) and the specimens from juvenile animals (Figure 1A). In the wound-healing mesenteries, the arterioles and venules typically had larger diameters and shorter segment lengths compared with the young adult and compound 48/80treated specimens. In both the wound-healing and compound 48/80treated specimens, capillary loops were abundant after treatment and contributed to a considerable portion of the increase in overall vascular density.
The microguidance of capillary sprouting by the elastic fiber matrix is illustrated in Figures 24. Low-magnification images are provided in each of these figures to illustrate the structure of the elastic fiber matrix with respect to the mesenteric microvascular networks and to demonstrate the affinity of the antibodies for the endothelial cells (Figures 2A2C and 3A3C) and pericytes/smooth muscle cells (Figure 4A-4C) comprising rat mesenteric microvessels. Higher-magnification confocal images show the influence of the elastic fiber matrix on the morphology of capillary sprout leading endothelial cells (Figures 2F, 3F, and 3I) and pericytes (Figures 4F and 4I). In the majority of capillary sprouts that were invading the avascular tissue space, the leading endothelial cells and pericytes were aligned and in contact with an underlying elastic fiber. In contrast, the endothelial cells leading many short and/or introverting capillary sprouts were more rounded and often were not aligned with an elastic fiber (Figure 3O). In some sprouts, higher-magnification observations revealed that leading endothelial cells extended filopodia that contacted multiple elastic fibers (Figure 3L).
Quantification of the contact and alignment of capillary sprout leading endothelial cells with respect to the elastic fiber matrix is presented in Figures 2G, 3P, and 3Q. This same quantity is reported for desmin-positive pericytes in Figure 4J. In each of these graphs, the bars indicate the percentage of capillary sprouts exhibiting the contact and alignment morphology shown in Figures 2F, 3F, 3I, and 4I. Cells exhibiting the morphology shown in Figure 3O are not considered to be in this conformation because, even though it was possible that filopodia from the cell were contacting the fiber, the cell body was not aligned with an elastic fiber.
In Figure 2, OX-43 antigen labeling was used to delineate capillary sprout endothelial cells. During normal maturation, The elastic fiber scaffolds on which capillary sprout cells migrate during normal maturation of the animal in the juvenile phase are characterized in Figures 5A and 5B. Elastic fiber diameters were measured from high-magnification (x180) confocal images (Figure 5A). A histogram of elastic fiber diameters is provided in Figure 5B. Elastic fiber diameters ranged from 0.18 to 1.40 µm, with a mean value of 0.71 µm. When we observed elastic fiber-guided sprouting, we noted that no particular fiber diameter or range of diameters was typically used for migration. The total length of elastic fiber per unit surface area of mesenteric connective tissue was calculated from lower-magnification images (x10) and was found to be 140.8 ± 37 mm of elastic fiber/mm2 tissue. The general morphology of the elastic fiber network with respect to type I collagen fibers is shown in Figures 5C5E. Parallel type I collagen fibers formed bundles that were woven throughout the tissue and, unlike the almost perfectly straight elastic fibers, exhibited a wavy or buckled morphology. This general morphology is also clearly evident in Figure 5J. In Figures 5F5K, a CD31-labeled capillary sprout is shown with respect to the resident type I collagen fibers. Unlike the elastic fiber results shown in Figures 24, contact guidance of sprout leading cells along type I collagen fibers was not observed.
The central finding of this study is that, during angiogenesis in rat mesenteric connective tissue, capillary sprout endothelial cells and pericytes preferentially migrate along resident elastic fibers. The prevalence of this phenomenon was influenced by both the applied angiogenic stimulus and the anatomic position of the sprout within the network. In particular, with compound 48/80 application, the percentage of capillary sprout endothelial cells aligned and in contact with elastic fibers decreased significantly from 85% to 60% (Figures 2G and 3P). Further analysis of capillary sprouting in these networks revealed that this difference was due to the increased prevalence of capillary sprouts that were introverting back into regions of tissue that were already vascularized (Figure 3Q). In the compound 48/80treated specimens, only 39% of all introverting sprout leading endothelial cells aligned with elastic fibers. In contrast, 74% of the capillary sprouts that were invading the avascular tissue space were still aligned and in contact with elastic fibers (Figure 3Q). The cells leading many introverting sprouts extended filopodia to elastic fibers but were not yet aligned with the fiber itself. We speculate that this morphology, which is illustrated in Figure 3L, may indicate that the sprouting cells are seeking elastic fibers via filopod extension before changing their direction of migration.
Interestingly, these differences in endothelial cell association with elastic fibers mirror recently observed phenotypic differences between endothelial cells in introverting and invading capillary sprouts (Anderson et al. 2004
The presence of ECM components, such as laminin, type IV collagen, heparan sulfate proteoglycan, and fibronectin, around capillary sprouts has been shown by other investigators (Jerdan et al. 1991
Given the likelihood that the elastic fibers in rat mesentery are composed of several constituents, a diverse collection of molecular recognition sites may exist for cell binding. Of these potential binding sites, at least two have been studied. First, it has been shown that cells bind directly to the VGVAGP peptide repeat in elastin through a 67-kD non-integrin adhesion molecule known as the elastinlaminin receptor (ELR) (Mecham et al. 1997
Our general observations may also be significant for tissue-engineering applications because they demonstrate that sprouting may be guided by discrete elastic fibers comprising a tissue support scaffold. In conjunction with our general observations of type I collagen bundle morphology, the specific measurements of elastic fiber density and diameter provided here may be used to generate biomimetic tissue-engineered scaffolds and constructs that directionally guide the migration of endothelial cells and pericytes within capillary sprouts. Throughout our observations of elastic fiber-guided sprouting, no clear preference of the sprout leading cells for a certain diameter fiber was seen, indicating that both large- and small-diameter elastic fibers were capable of sprout guidance and could be included in such a design. The elastic fibers in such constructs could be directionally orientated to control both the rate and spatial position of a developing microvascular network, essentially providing another level of control over the manner in which tissue-engineered constructs become vascularized. Moreover, the key observation that elastic fibers are capable of guiding pericyte migration may be particularly important because these cells are necessary for stabilizing and maturing microvessels (Lindahl et al. 1997
Supported by a grant from the National Institutes of Health (RO1 HL66307).
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