Blood vessel maturation in a
3-dimensional spheroidal coculture model: direct contact with smooth muscle
cells regulates endothelial cell quiescence and abrogates VEGF
responsiveness.
Korff T, Kimmina S, Martiny-Baron G, Augustin HG.
Cell Biology Laboratory, Department of Gynecology and Obstetrics, University
of Gottingen Medical School, 37075 Gottingen, Germany.
Paracrine interactions between endothelial cells (EC) and mural cells act as
critical regulators of vessel wall assembly, vessel maturation and define a
plasticity window for vascular remodeling. The present study was aimed at
studying blood vessel maturation processes in a novel 3-dimensional
spheroidal coculture system of EC and smooth muscle cells (SMC). Coculture
spheroids differentiate spontaneously in a calcium-dependent manner to
organize into a core of SMC and a surface layer of EC, thus mimicking the
physiological assembly of blood vessels with surface lining EC and
underlying mural cells. Coculture of EC with SMC induces a mature, quiescent
EC phenotype as evidenced by 1) a significant increase in the number of
junctional complexes of the EC surface layer, 2) a down-regulation of PDGF-B
expression by cocultured EC, and 3) an increased resistance of EC to undergo
apoptosis. Furthermore, EC cocultured with SMC become refractory to
stimulation with VEGF (lack of CD34 expression on VEGF stimulation;
inability to form capillary-like sprouts in a VEGF-dependent manner in a
3-dimensional in gel angiogenesis assay). In contrast, costimulation with
VEGF and Ang-2 induced sprouting angiogenesis originating from coculture
spheroids consistent with a model of Ang-2-mediated vessel destabilization
resulting in VEGF responsiveness. Ang-2 on its own was able to stimulate
endothelial cells in the absence of Ang-1 producing SMC, inducing lateral
sheet migration as well as in gel sprouting angiogenesis. Taken together,
the data establish the spheroidal EC/SMC system as a powerful cell culture
model to study paracrine interactions in the vessel wall and provide
functional evidence for smooth muscle cell-mediated quiescence effects on
endothelial cells.