Abstract

Angiogenesis is essential for normal homeostasis, wound healing, and tumor growth and involves a switch in endothelial cell (EC) phenotype from quiescence to migration, proliferation and network formation, and back to quiescence. The notch signaling pathway is critically involved in cell fate decisions during development, and mice deficient in several notch/notch ligand genes have vascular phenotypes. Here we show that notch signaling is activated during EC capillary-like network formation in vitro and that EC express transcripts for notch 1, notch 4, the notch ligand delta 4, and the putative notch processing enzymes ADAM-10 and presenilin. Expression of dominant negative notch blocks network formation; however, constitutively active notch (NICD) does not induce morphologic changes. Furthermore, both EC network formation and expression of activated notch 1 or notch 4 induce expression of the bHLH transcription factor HESR-1 and downregulate the known HESR-1 target VEGFR-2 (KDR). Notch-mediated reduction in VEGFR-2 expression results in decreased EC proliferation in response to VEGF but not bFGF. These data suggest that HESR-1 may be involved in the phenotypic changes that characterize the progression from EC proliferation and migration to network formation and quiescence.

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