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Mechanisms regulating the origins of the vertebrate vascular system

✍ Scribed by Margaret S. Saha; Elizabeth A. Cox; Conor W. Sipe


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2004
Tongue
English
Weight
150 KB
Volume
93
Category
Article
ISSN
0730-2312

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


Abstract

In order to sustain growth, differentiation, and organogenesis, vertebrate embryos must form a functional vascular system early in embryonic development. Intrinsic interest in this process as well as the promise of potential clinical applications has led to significant progress in understanding the mechanisms governing the formation of the vascular system, however the earliest stages of vascular developmentβ€”the emergence of committed endothelial precursors from the mesodermβ€”remain unclear. A review of the current literature reveals an unexpected diversity and heterogeneity with respect to where vascular endothelial cells originate in the embryo, when they become committed and the mechanisms governing how endothelial cells acquire their identity. Spatially, a widespread region of the early mesoderm possesses the ability to give rise to vascular endothelial cells; temporally the process is not limited to a small window during embryogenesis, but rather, may continue throughout the lifespan of the organism. On the molecular level, recent findings point to several determinative pathways that regulate, modulate, and extend the scope of the Flk1/VEGF signaling system. An expanding array of novel gene products implicated in endothelial cell type determination appear to act synergistically, with different combinations of factors leading to diverse cellular responses, varying patterns of differentiation, and considerable heterogeneity of endothelial cell types during embryogenesis. Β© 2004 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.


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