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VEGF-C–dependent stimulation of lymphatic function ameliorates experimental inflammatory bowel disease
Silvia D’Alessio, Carmen Correale, Carlotta Tacconi, Alessandro Gandelli, Giovanni Pietrogrande, Stefania Vetrano, Marco Genua, Vincenzo Arena, Antonino Spinelli, Laurent Peyrin-Biroulet, Claudio Fiocchi, Silvio Danese
Silvia D’Alessio, Carmen Correale, Carlotta Tacconi, Alessandro Gandelli, Giovanni Pietrogrande, Stefania Vetrano, Marco Genua, Vincenzo Arena, Antonino Spinelli, Laurent Peyrin-Biroulet, Claudio Fiocchi, Silvio Danese
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Research Article Vascular biology

VEGF-C–dependent stimulation of lymphatic function ameliorates experimental inflammatory bowel disease

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Abstract

Crohn’s disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC) are chronic inflammatory bowel diseases (IBDs) of unknown etiology that are associated with an aberrant mucosal immune response. Neoangiogenesis and vascular injury are observed in IBD along with increased lymphangiogenesis. While the pathogenic role of angiogenesis in IBD is well characterized, it is not clear how or if increased lymphangiogenesis promotes disease. Here, we determined that enhancing lymphangiogenesis and lymphatic function reduces experimental IBD. Specifically, we demonstrated that adenoviral induction of prolymphangiogenic factor VEGF-C provides marked protection against the development of acute and chronic colitis in 2 different animal models. VEGF-C–dependent protection was observed in combination with increased inflammatory cell mobilization and bacterial antigen clearance from the inflamed colon to the draining lymph nodes. Moreover, we found that the VEGF-C/VEGFR3 pathway regulates macrophage (MΦ) plasticity and activation both in cultured MΦs and in vivo, imparting a hybrid M1-M2 phenotype. The protective function of VEGF-C was meditated by the so-called resolving MΦs during chronic experimental colitis in a STAT6-dependent manner. Together, these findings shed light on the contribution of lymphatics to the pathogenesis of gut inflammation and suggest that correction of defective lymphatic function with VEGF-C has potential as a therapeutic strategy for IBD.

Authors

Silvia D’Alessio, Carmen Correale, Carlotta Tacconi, Alessandro Gandelli, Giovanni Pietrogrande, Stefania Vetrano, Marco Genua, Vincenzo Arena, Antonino Spinelli, Laurent Peyrin-Biroulet, Claudio Fiocchi, Silvio Danese

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Figure 6

Systemic delivery of Ad-hVEGF-C accelerates bacterial antigen clearance from the inflamed colon to DLNs.

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Systemic delivery of Ad-hVEGF-C accelerates bacterial antigen clearance ...
(A–C) A single intramucosal injection of carboxylated crimson fluorescent LPS-coated beads was administered on day 5 after the second DSS cycle (chronic inflammation) and on day 21 after the first Ad-hVEGF-C/mF431C1 administration to IL-10–KO mice. Colitic mice treated with Ad-GFP and injected with LPS-coated beads were used as controls. (A) FACS plots showing DCs (R1 and R4) and MΦs (R3 and R5) within the bead+ cell population based on the expression of CD11b (R3), CD11c (R1), F4/80 (R5, gated on R2), and CD103 (R4, gated on R2). (B and C) Clearance of single-bead+ cells from the inflamed colon (left panels) to the DLNs (right panels) was monitored, and quantification is reported as the mean per group ± SEM. n = 5 mice per group. *P < 0.05 versus LPS-coated beads plus Ad-GFP.

Copyright © 2026 American Society for Clinical Investigation
ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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