Laminin-dystroglycan signaling regulates retinal arteriogenesis

FASEB J. 2018 Jun 6;32(11):fj201800232R. doi: 10.1096/fj.201800232R. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Proper arteriovenous morphogenesis is crucial for maintaining normal tissue perfusion. However, our understanding of how arterial morphogenesis is regulated in the CNS is incomplete. In this study, we asked whether vascular basement membrane (BM) laminins, specifically the γ3-containing isoforms, regulate retinal arterial morphogenesis. We provide evidence that Laminin-γ3 is deposited at both arterial and venous BMs during arteriogenesis. Vascular BM Laminin-γ3 bound dystroglycan (DG), a laminin receptor preferentially expressed by arterial endothelial cells (ECs) during arteriogenesis. Blockade of laminin-DG binding in vitro led to decreased Delta-like ligand (DLL)-4 expression in ECs. Moreover, genetic deletion of the Laminin-γ3- and EC-specific deletion of DG led to similar defects in retinal arteriogenesis, including reduced Dll4 expression, hyperbranching and reduced smooth muscle coverage. These results implicate a newly identified Laminin-γ3-DG signaling cascade that regulates arterial Dll4/Notch signaling to specify and stabilize retinal arteries.-Biswas, S., Watters, J., Bachay, G., Varshney, S., Hunter, D. D., Hu, H., Brunken, W. J. Laminin-dystroglycan signaling regulates retinal arteriogenesis.

Keywords: CNS angiogenesis; basement membrane; extracellular matrix; vascular remodeling.