Vascular endothelial growth factor/vascular permeability factor is temporally and spatially correlated with ocular angiogenesis in a primate model

JW Miller, AP Adamis, DT Shima… - The American journal …, 1994 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
JW Miller, AP Adamis, DT Shima, PA D'Amore, RS Moulton, MS O'Reilly, J Folkman…
The American journal of pathology, 1994ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Ischemia often precedes neovascularization. Inocular neovascularization, such as occurs in
diabetic retinopathy, a diffusible angiogenic factor has been postulated to be produced by
ischemicretina and to lead to neovascularization of theretina, optic nerve, or iris. However,
no angiogenic factor has been conclusively identified that satisfies this hypothesis. Vascular
endothelial growth factor/vascular permeability factor, hereafter referred to as VEGF, is a
likely candidate for an ocular angiogenic factor because it is a secreted mitogen, specific for …
Abstract
Ischemia often precedes neovascularization. Inocular neovascularization, such as occurs in diabetic retinopathy, a diffusible angiogenic factor has been postulated to be produced by ischemicretina and to lead to neovascularization of theretina, optic nerve, or iris. However, no angiogenic factor has been conclusively identified that satisfies this hypothesis. Vascular endothelial growth factor/vascular permeability factor, hereafter referred to as VEGF, is a likely candidate for an ocular angiogenic factor because it is a secreted mitogen, specific for endothelial cells, and is upregulated by hypoxia. We investigated the association of VEGF with the development of experimental iris neovascularization in the cynomolgus monkey. Following theproduction of retinal ischemia by laser occlusion of all branch retinal veins, VEGF was increased in the aqueous fluid, and the aqueous VEGF levels changed synchronously and proportionally with the severity of iris neovascularization. Northern analysis and in situ hybridization revealed that VEGF messenger RNA is upregulated in the ischemic retina. These observations support the hypothesis that ocular neovascularization is regulated by a diffusible factor and identify VEGF as a likely candidate for a retina-derived vascular permeability and angiogenesis factor in vivo.
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