[HTML][HTML] Vascular endothelial growth factor. Regulation by cell differentiation and activated second messenger pathways.

KP Claffey, WO Wilkison, BM Spiegelman - Journal of Biological Chemistry, 1992 - Elsevier
KP Claffey, WO Wilkison, BM Spiegelman
Journal of Biological Chemistry, 1992Elsevier
Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) is an angiogenic polypeptide that has been
isolated from a variety of tumorigenic and nontransformed cell lines. Because of the
importance of blood vessel growth to cell and tissue development, we have examined VEGF
gene expression in a variety of mouse tissues and rodent models of cellular differentiation.
Using a cloned murine VEGF cDNA we show that VEGF mRNA is expressed at relatively low
levels in many adult mouse tissues examined. However, this message is dramatically …
Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) is an angiogenic polypeptide that has been isolated from a variety of tumorigenic and nontransformed cell lines. Because of the importance of blood vessel growth to cell and tissue development, we have examined VEGF gene expression in a variety of mouse tissues and rodent models of cellular differentiation. Using a cloned murine VEGF cDNA we show that VEGF mRNA is expressed at relatively low levels in many adult mouse tissues examined. However, this message is dramatically induced in two models of cell differentiation: 3T3-adipose conversion and C2C12 myogenic differentiation. VEGF protein secretion is also induced in adipocyte differentiation. VEGF mRNA is markedly regulated in a pheochromocytoma (PC12) cell model of transformation and differentiation. The transformed undifferentiated cells express moderate levels of VEGF mRNA and this expression is virtually extinguished when cells differentiate into non-malignant neuron-like cells. Experiments employing phorbol esters and cAMP analogues indicate that VEGF mRNA expression is stimulated in preadipocytes by both protein kinase C and protein kinase A-mediated pathways. These results suggest that VEGF mRNA levels are closely linked to the process of cellular differentiation; they also clearly demonstrate that expression of this angiogenic factor is specifically regulated in a transformed cell line, possibly via aberrant activation of cellular second messenger pathways.
Elsevier