[HTML][HTML] Vasculogenesis, angiogenesis, and growth factors: ephrins enter the fray at the border

GD Yancopoulos, M Klagsbrun, J Folkman - Cell, 1998 - cell.com
GD Yancopoulos, M Klagsbrun, J Folkman
Cell, 1998cell.com
). The key players include the Eph-B4 receptor from the Eph family—the largest known
family of receptor tyrosine kinases—and its obligate membrane-bound ligand, ephrin-B2.
Wang et al. also link the actions of ephrin-B2 and Eph-B4 to those of a recently defined
family of angiogenic factors, the angiopoietins, and their endothelial-specific receptor
tyrosine kinases, the Ties.
). The key players include the Eph-B4 receptor from the Eph family—the largest known family of receptor tyrosine kinases—and its obligate membrane-bound ligand, ephrin-B2. Wang et al. also link the actions of ephrin-B2 and Eph-B4 to those of a recently defined family of angiogenic factors, the angiopoietins, and their endothelial-specific receptor tyrosine kinases, the Ties.
cell.com