Abstract

BackgroundSurvivin is the smallest member of the inhibitor of apoptosis (IAP) gene family. Recently, the zebrafish survivin-1 gene has been cloned, showing remarkable sequence identity and similarity over the BIR domain compared with human and mouse survivin gene. Here we investigated the role of survivin in angiogenesis during zebrafish development. Morpholinos (MOs) targeting the 5' untranslated region (UTR) (SurUTR) and sequences flanking the initiation codon (SurATG) of zebrafish survivin-1 gene were injected into embryos at 1–4 cell stage. Vasculature was examined by microangiography and GFP expression in Tg(fli1:EGFP)y1 embryos. Results: In embryos co-injected with SurUTR and SurATG-MOs, vasculogenesis was intact but angiogenesis was markedly perturbed, especially in the inter-segmental vessels (ISV) and dorsal longitudinal anastomotic vessels (DLAV) of the trunk, the inner optic circle and optic veins of developing eyes and the sub-intestinal vessels. Apoptosis was increased, as shown by TUNEL staining and increase in caspase-3 activity. Efficacy of SurUTR and SurATG-MOs was demonstrated by translation inhibition of co-injected 5'UTR survivin:GFP plasmids. The phenotypes could be recapitulated by splice-site MO targeting the exon2-intron junction of survivin gene and rescued by survivin mRNA. Injection of human vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) protein induced ectopic angiogenesis and increased survivin expression, whereas treatment with a VEGF receptor inhibitor markedly reduced angiogenesis and suppressed survivin expression. Conclusion: Survivin is involved in angiogenesis during zebrafish development and may be under VEGF regulation.

Highlights

  • Survivin is the smallest member of the inhibitor of apoptosis (IAP) gene family containing a single Baculovirus IAP Repeat (BIR) domain and an extended -COOH terminal α-helical coiled coil [1]

  • Double in-situ hybridization showed that survivin was expressed in the developing axial vasculature dorsal to the intermediate cell mass (ICM), where gene encoding for embryonic hemoglobin α was expressed

  • Co-injecting SurATG + SurUTR-MOs (3 ng each) resulted in specific phenotypes in 79.4 ± 7.2% embryos without increase in toxicity or Effects of survivin knock-down on angiogenesis We have previously shown that survivin is significantly upregulated in a zebrafish chordin morphant in which the ICM was expanded [7]

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Summary

Introduction

Survivin is the smallest member of the inhibitor of apoptosis (IAP) gene family. We investigated the role of survivin in angiogenesis during zebrafish development. Morpholinos (MOs) targeting the 5' untranslated region (UTR) (SurUTR) and sequences flanking the initiation codon (SurATG) of zebrafish survivin-1 gene were injected into embryos at 1–4 cell stage. Results: In embryos co-injected with SurUTR and SurATG-MOs, vasculogenesis was intact but angiogenesis was markedly perturbed, especially in the inter-segmental vessels (ISV) and dorsal longitudinal anastomotic vessels (DLAV) of the trunk, the inner optic circle and optic veins of developing eyes and the subintestinal vessels. Survivin is the smallest member of the inhibitor of apoptosis (IAP) gene family containing a single Baculovirus IAP Repeat (BIR) domain and an extended -COOH terminal α-helical coiled coil [1]. Embryos with characteristic phenotypes were investigated while those which were severely deformed were excluded from analysis

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