First published online 5 August 2003
doi: 10.1242/jcs.00681
Endothelial expression of the
6ß4 integrin is negatively regulated during angiogenesis
Tejindervir S. Hiran1,
Joseph E. Mazurkiewicz2,
Paul Kreienberg3,4,
Frank L. Rice2 and
Susan E. LaFlamme1,*
1 Center for Cell Biology and Cancer Research, Albany Medical College, Albany,
NY 12208, USA
2 The Center for Neuropharmacology and Neuroscience, Albany Medical College,
Albany, NY 12208, USA
3 The Institute for Vascular Health and Disease, Albany Medical College, Albany,
NY 12208, USA
4 The Center for Cardiovascular Sciences, Albany Medical College, Albany, NY
12208, USA

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Fig. 1. The 6ß4 integrin is expressed by human dermal microvascular
endothelial cells. (A-D) Sections of human neonatal foreskin were double
immunostained with antibodies to the endothelial marker von Willebrand Factor
(vWF) (A), and with 3E1 antibodies to the ß4 subunit (B). The white
dotted line indicates the epidermal-dermal interface. (C) The colocalization
of ß4 and vWF is seen in the merged image as yellow, with a
representative ß4-positive vessel indicated by the arrow. (D) A
microvessel in cross section examined at higher magnification using confocal
laser scanning microscopy, showing vWF (green) and ß4 (red). (E-J) Cells
isolated from human neonatal foreskin were double immunostained to detect
ß4 and endothelial cell-, smooth muscle cell-, and keratinocyte-specific
markers: (E) cells stained with pAb to PECAM-1 (red) and 3E1 to ß4
(green); (G) cells stained with 1A4 to smooth muscle actin (red) and 3E1 to
ß4 (green); and (I) cells stained with AE1/AE3 to human epidermal
keratins (red) to detect keratinocytes and 439-9B to ß4 (green). (E,G,I)
The corresponding phase contrast images are shown in F, H and J, respectively.
The cells that stained brightly with only ß4 in E and G are probably
keratinocytes. Scale bars: (A-C) 50 µm; (D-J) 10 µm.
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Fig. 2. ß4 integrin is expressed by endothelial cells of the vasa vasorum but
not by endothelial cells lining the lumen of human saphenous vein. (A) Frozen
section of human saphenous vein stained with Hematoxylin and Eosin; the
asterisk indicates the lumen of the saphenous vein. The dashed box shows an
example of the region chosen for higher magnification immunohistochemical
imaging in BE. Cross sections of saphenous vein were stained with antibodies
to vWF (B), marking endothelial cells lining the main lumen (arrow) and the
vasa vasorum (arrowheads) and 3E1 to ß4 (D), selectively staining
endothelial cells of the vasa vasorum (arrowheads). (C,E) Control
immunostaining in the absence of primary antibody, for B and D, respectively.
Scale bars: (A) 500 µm; (B-E) 200 µm.
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Fig. 3. Angiogenic endothelial cells do not express the 6ß4 integrin in
explant cultures. Segments of human saphenous vein were grown as explant
cultures in fibrin gels for 14 days. The plus sign indicates the explant
tissue, with the outer surface of the original explant tissue outlined with a
dotted blue line in A,C,E. (A,B) Cross sections of explant and outgrowth
stained with antibodies to vWF, which stained outgrowing endothelial cells as
well as endothelial cells remaining in the vasa vasorum and lining the
saphenous vein lumen. A higher magnification of a region of outgrowth is shown
in B. (C,E) Cross sections stained with 3E1 to ß4 (C) showing no ß4
expression on either the explant saphenous vein or the outgrowing endothelial
cells, and 1A4 to smooth muscle actin (E) which stained the original explant,
but not outgrowing cells. (D,F) Phase contrast images of C and E,
respectively. Arrows indicate the direction of outgrowth. Controls with
secondary antibody alone showed insignificant staining similar to the controls
for the immunostainings in Fig.
2 (data not shown). Scale bars: (A,C-F) 200 µm; (B) 20
µm.
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Fig. 4. 6ß4-integrin-positive endothelial cells of the vasa vasorum
contribute to angiogenesis in explant cultures of human saphenous vein. Human
saphenous vein was treated with collagenase to strip the endothelial lining
from the main lumen. (A,B) Cross sections of collagenase-treated explants were
stained with pAb to PECAM-1 (A) and 3E1 to ß4 (B). Endothelial cells of
the vasa vasorum maintained PECAM-1 and ß4 expression (black arrowheads);
however, expression of PECAM-1 was not observed on the lumenal surface (open
arrowhead), indicating the endothelial cells had been successfully removed.
(C,D) Phase contrast images of endothelial outgrowth from collagenase-treated
(D) or untreated (C) segments of saphenous vein after 14 days in culture in
fibrinogen gels. Little angiogenic outgrowth occurred in the
collagenase-treated lumen (D); however, robust endothelial outgrowth was
observed from the vasa vasorum (E). (F-I) Cross sections of
collagenase-treated saphenous vein explants were immunostained after 14 days
in culture with either pAb to PECAM-1 (F,G), or with 3E1 to ß4 (H),
indicating the outgrowing endothelial cells (arrow) do not express ß4. A
region of outgrowth stained for PECAM-1 is shown at higher magnification in G.
(I) A phase contrast image of H. (F,H) The perimeter of the explant is
outlined by the dotted blue line. Controls with secondary antibody alone
showed insignificant staining similar to the controls for immunostainings in
Fig. 2 (data not shown). (J)
Day-12 explant of human neonatal foreskin double stained with AE1/AE3 to human
epidermal keratins (red) and 439-9B to ß4 (green), demonstrating that
keratinocytes do not downregulate ß4 in explant cultures. Asterisks
indicate vessel lumen. Plus signs indicate original explanted tissue. Arrows
indicate outgrowing endothelial cells or keratinocytes. Scale bars:
(A,B,F,H,I) 100 µm; (G) 20 µm; (J) 50 µm.
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Fig. 5. 6ß4 is expressed by endothelial cells in the adult mystacial
pad. (A) Schematic representation of the vasculature associated with a whisker
follicle (wf) in the adult mouse mystacial whisker pad. Small fur hairs (h)
and a large whisker (w) are shown in dark gray. The epidermis (e), small hair
follicles, and large whisker follicle are shown in light gray. The whisker
follicle is surrounded by a vascular sinus (pink) which is enclosed by a dense
collagen capsule (medium gray). Arteries, arterioles and capillary beds are
red; veins and venules are blue; nerves are green; and piloerector muscles are
brown (Fundin et al., 1997a ;
Fundin et al., 1997b ;
Rice et al., 1997 ). Dashed
rectangles indicate areas comparable to sites in B,C, and in higher
magnification in D-I. (B-I) Immunofluorescence staining of longitudinal
sections of an adult whisker follicle. Adjacent sections were immunostained
with anti-s100 (B,C: green) for Schwann cells on nerve axons. Double
immunostaining with MEC 13.3 (B: red) labels PECAM-1 on the endothelium of all
blood vessels. Double immunostaining with 346-11A (C: red) labels ß4 on
the perineurium of nerves and endothelium of many blood vessels. Regions of B
and C (dotted boxes) are shown at higher magnification (D,F,H) and (E,G,I)
respectively. Arrows indicate nerves. Arrowheads indicate examples of
ß4-positive vessels; dotted ovals indicate ß4-negative vessels.
ß4 labeling is also present on basal keratinocytes (E, arrows) of the
epidermis and hair follicles. Scale bars: 100 µm.
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Fig. 8. Confocal microscope images showing double immunostaining of microvascular
endothelial cells for ß4 (red) and PECAM-1 (green). Each image is a
maximum intensity projection image of a sub-stack of six optical sections
taken from a larger stack of images collected at 0.3 µm intervals. The
images were collected in the region just below the epidermal-dermal junction
from sections of skin from adult (A-C) and P3 (D-F) mice. In the adult, almost
all the vessels in this region showed immunoreactivity for ß4 and PECAM-1
(A-C, arrowheads). At P3, vessels expressing ß4 were rare (D-E, solid
arrowhead), most lacked ß4 (open arrowheads). No vessels in this location
showed ß4 immunoreactivity at P0 (not shown). Arrows indicate ß4
immunoreactivity on basal keratinocytes in the epidermis (e) and hair
follicles (f). Scale bar: 25 µm.
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Fig. 6. Following the caudal to rostral and deep to superficial development of the
whisker pad vasculature (E), embryonic microvascular endothelial cells of the
whisker pad only express the ß4 integrin subunit in the caudal and deep
vasculature in the whisker pad from an E19.5 p.c. animal. Sections from the
caudal region (A,B) are shown immunostained with s100 (green) and either MEC
13.3 to PECAM-1 (A: red) or with 346-11A to ß4 (B: red). Neighboring
sections from a more rostral region are shown immunostained with MEC 13.3 to
PECAM-1 (C) or 346-11A to ß4 (D). The majority of the vasculature was
ß4 negative, however, some larger caliber vessels deeper in the tissue
were ß4 positive (arrowheads). (E) Schematic representation of the
whisker pad showing six whisker follicles along the caudal to rostral axis,
where the filled arrowhead indicates a whisker and the open arrowhead
indicates a hair follicle. Intense ß4 labeling is present on basal
keratinocytes of the epidermis (e), hair follicles (f) and whisker follicles
(wf). Scale bars: 100 µm.
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Fig. 7. Microvascular endothelial cells turn on ß4 expression during postnatal
development. The progression of endothelial ß4 expression was examined
during postnatal development of the whisker pad. Neighboring sections were
immunostained with s100 (A-F: green) and either MEC 13.3 to PECAM-1 (A,C,E:
red) or with 346-11A to ß4 (B,D,F: red). Caudal regions from P0 embryos
(A,B) and P3 embryos (C,D), and rostral region from P7 embryos (E,F) are
shown. Arrowheads indicate examples of vessels that express ß4 (A-F). At
P0, only vessels in the most caudal and deep regions of the whisker pad showed
expression of ß4. By P3, the same regions show more vascular ß4
expression. By P7, ß4 expression is observed throughout the vasculature
of the whisker pad, as shown on the rostral-most whisker follicles. Dotted
ovals indicate examples of regions where vessels do not express ß4. Scale
bars: 100 µm.
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© The Company of Biologists Ltd 2003