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Akiyoshi Uemura, Sentaro Kusuhara, Stanley J. Wiegand, Ruth T. Yu, Shin-Ichi Nishikawa
Published in Volume 116, Issue 2
J Clin Invest. 2006; 116(2):369–377 doi:10.1172/JCI25964
Abstract | Full text | PDF
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Figure 7

A model for molecular networks regulating the proangiogenic switches in retinal astrocytes. Upon sensing hypoxia, activated HIFs primarily upregulate the transcriptional levels of VEGF and possibly Tlx. Tlx then controls the secondary cascades involved in the extracellular assembly of fibronectin scaffolds, with concomitant repression of GFAP. Once associated with blood vessels, hypoxia-inducible genes supporting the proangiogenic state are downregulated by increasing oxygen concentration. Finally, retinal astrocytes upregulate GFAP and form a blood-retina barrier in cooperation with endothelial cells.