VE-PTP controls blood vessel development by balancing Tie-2 activity

Winderlich M, Keller L, Cagna G, Broermann A, Kamenyeva O, Kiefer F, Deutsch U, Nottebaum AF, Vestweber D

Research article (journal) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

Vascular endothelial protein tyrosine phosphatase (VE-PTP) is an endothelial-specific receptor-type tyrosine phosphatase that associates with Tie-2 and VE-cadherin. VE-PTP gene disruption leads to embryonic lethality, vascular remodeling defects, and enlargement of vascular structures in extraembryonic tissues. We show here that antibodies against the extracellular part of VE-PTP mimic the effects of VE-PTP gene disruption exemplified by vessel enlargement in allantois explants. These effects require the presence of the angiopoietin receptor Tie-2. Analyzing the mechanism we found that anti-VE-PTP antibodies trigger endocytosis and selectively affect Tie-2-associated, but not VE-cadherin-associated VE-PTP. Dissociation of VE-PTP triggers the activation of Tie-2, leading to enhanced endothelial cell proliferation and enlargement of vascular structures through activation of Erk1/2. Importantly, the antibody effect on vessel enlargement is also observed in newborn mice. We conclude that VE-PTP is required to balance Tie-2 activity and endothelial cell proliferation, thereby controlling blood vessel development and vessel size.

Details about the publication

JournalJournal of Cell Biology
Volume185
Issue4
Page range657-671
StatusPublished
Release year2009 (18/05/2009)
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
Keywordsreceptor tyrosine kinase in-vivo endothelial-cells angiopoietin-1 angiogenesis phosphatase activation cadherin vasculogenesis autophosphorylation

Authors from the University of Münster

Kiefer, Friedemann
European Institute of Molecular Imaging (EIMI)
Vestweber, Dietmar
Max Planck Institute for Molecular Biomedicine