Abstract

Here we examine the question of how endothelial cells (ECs) develop their apical membrane surface domain during lumen and tube formation. We demonstrate marked apical membrane targeting of activated Src kinases to this apical domain during early and late stages of this process. Immunostaining for phosphotyrosine or phospho-Src reveals apical membrane staining in intracellular vacuoles initially. This is then followed by vacuole to vacuole fusion events to generate an apical luminal membrane, which is similarly decorated with activated phospho-Src kinases. Functional blockade of Src kinases completely blocks EC lumen and tube formation, whether this occurs during vasculogenic tube assembly or angiogenic sprouting events. Multiple Src kinases participate in this apical membrane formation process and siRNA suppression of Src, Fyn and Yes, but not Lyn, blocks EC lumen formation. We also demonstrate strong apical targeting of Src-GFP and Fyn-GFP fusion proteins and increasing their expression enhances lumen formation. Finally, we show that Src- and Fyn-associated vacuoles track and fuse along a subapically polarized microtubule cytoskeleton, which is highly acetylated. These vacuoles generate the apical luminal membrane in a stereotypically polarized, perinuclear position. Overall, our study identifies a critical role for Src kinases in creating and decorating the EC apical membrane surface during early and late stages of lumen and tube formation, a central event in the molecular control of vascular morphogenesis.

Highlights

  • Considerable advances have occurred over the past two decades in elucidating the molecular basis of vascular tube morphogenesis [1,2,3,4,5,6,7]

  • We examine the role of Src kinases in apical membrane polarization during endothelial cells (ECs) tubulogenesis in the context of vasculogenic or angiogenic tube assembly

  • We demonstrate that strong localization of phosphotyrosine is observed in intracellular vacuole membranes and developing apical membrane surface, while F-actin is seen in a polarized, basal distribution (Fig 1A and 1C)

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Summary

Introduction

Considerable advances have occurred over the past two decades in elucidating the molecular basis of vascular tube morphogenesis [1,2,3,4,5,6,7] This resulted from joint studies in vitro and in vivo whereby key regulators have been identified and signal transduction cascades have been elucidated, which together control mechanisms underlying endothelial cell (EC) lumen formation [8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28] and downstream maturation events occurring following the recruitment of mural.

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