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MFG-E8 Regulates Angiogenesis in Cutaneous Wound Healing
Authors:Akihiko Uchiyama  Kazuya Yamada  Sachiko Ogino  Yoko Yokoyama  Yuko Takeuchi  Mark C. Udey  Osamu Ishikawa  Sei-ichiro Motegi
Affiliation:Department of Dermatology, Gunma University Graduate School of Medicine, Maebashi, Japan;Dermatology Branch, Center for Cancer Research, National Cancer Institute, NIH, Bethesda, Maryland
Abstract:Our research group recently demonstrated that pericytes are major sources of the secreted glycoprotein and integrin ligand lactadherin (MFG-E8) in B16 melanoma tumors, and that MFG-E8 promotes angiogenesis via enhanced PDGF–PDGFRβ signaling mediated by integrin–growth factor receptor crosstalk. However, sources of MFG-E8 and its possible roles in skin physiology are not well characterized. The objective of this study was to characterize the involvement of MFG-E8 in skin wound healing. In the dermis of normal murine and human skin, accumulations of MFG-E8 were found around CD31+ blood vessels, and MFG-E8 colocalized with PDGFRβ+, αSMA+, and NG2+ pericytes. MFG-E8 protein and mRNA levels were elevated in the dermis during full-thickness wound healing in mice. MFG-E8 was diffusely present in granulation tissue and was localized around blood vessels. Wound healing was delayed in MFG-E8 knockout mice, compared with the wild type, and myofibroblast and vessel numbers in wound areas were significantly reduced in knockout mice. Inhibition of MFG-E8 production with siRNA attenuated the formation of capillary-like structures in vitro. Expression of MFG-E8 in fibrous human granulation tissue with scant blood vessels was less than that in granulation tissue with many blood vessels. These findings suggest that MFG-E8 promotes cutaneous wound healing by enhancing angiogenesis.Wound healing is a dynamic process involving angiogenesis, production of soluble mediators and extracellular matrix, and migration of various types of cells, including keratinocytes, fibroblasts, macrophages, and leukocytes. Dysregulation of this interactive process may result in delayed wound healing, as is seen in chronic skin ulcers or scarring. Wound healing has three temporally overlapping phases: inflammation, tissue formation, and remodeling.1,2 The inflammation phase occurs immediately after wounding. It is characterized by hypoxia with fibrin clot formation, as well as recruitment of neutrophils and platelets. Tissue formation occurs 2 to 10 days later and is characterized by epithelialization, formation of granulation tissue and new blood vessels, and accumulation of macrophages and fibroblasts. Activated macrophages release growth factors, such as vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF), and initiate angiogenesis. PDGF receptor β (PDGFRβ) signaling is essential for angiogenesis and for recruitment, proliferation, and normal function of fibroblasts and pericytes during the tissue-formation phase.3 Blockade of VEGF receptor signaling and PDGFRβ signaling inhibits angiogenesis and results in delayed wound healing,3,4 indicating that angiogenesis is critical for normal wound healing.The secreted glycoprotein lactadherin was initially identified as a component of milk fat globules and is here referred to as milk fat globule-EGF factor 8 (MFG-E8); other names in the literature include secreted protein containing epidermal growth factor (EGF) repeats and discoidin/F5/8 domains 1, or SED1. MFG-E8 comprises two N-terminal EGF-like domains, and two C-terminal discoidin-like domains (C1 and C2) share homology with blood coagulation factors V and VIII.5–9 One EGF-like domain (E2) contains an RGD consensus integrin-binding motif, and MFG-E8 binds to integrin αvβ3/5.7–11 The C-terminal domains of MFG-E8 can bind to negatively charged and oxidized phospholipids,12,13 facilitating opsonization of apoptotic cells for uptake by phagocytes.10,14 This process has been reported to contribute to autoimmunity, mastitis, sepsis, atherosclerosis, and Alzheimer disease.15–19 Interactions of MFG-E8 with CD51 (integrin αv) have also been implicated in regulation of angiogenesis and mammary gland branching,11,20 and interactions mediated via the C1 domain are thought to be important for sperm–egg binding and collagen turnover.21,22Our research group has previously demonstrated that MFG-E8 enhances angiogenesis in tumors and in oxygen-induced retinopathy in mice.23 We determined that pericytes and/or pericyte precursors are important sources of MFG-E8 in vivo, that MFG-E8 enhances angiogenesis via actions on pericytes as well as endothelial cells (ECs), and that MFG-E8 can be effectively targeted with therapeutic benefit.23 In murine melanomas and in retinas of mice with oxygen-induced retinopathy, MFG-E8 colocalized with pericytes rather than with ECs, and pericytes purified from tumors contained large amounts of MFG-E8 mRNA. Tumor- and retinopathy-associated angiogenesis was diminished in MFG-E8 knockout (KO) mice, and pericyte coverage of neovessels was also reduced. Inhibition of MFG-E8 production by pericyte/pericyte precursor-like 10T1/2 cells using siRNAs, or inhibition of MFG-E8 action with some anti–MFG-E8 antibodies, attenuated PDGF-BB–induced 10T1/2 cell migration, but did not affect proliferation or differentiation.23 We have also determined that MFG-E8 produced by 10T1/2 cells associated with integrin αv and PDGFRβ on cell surfaces after PDGF-BB treatment, altered the distribution of PDGFRβ within cells and delayed PDGF-BB–stimulated degradation of PDGFRβ, thereby enhancing PDGFRβ signaling mediated by integrin–growth factor receptor crosstalk.24In a study of MFG-E8, epithelial tissues, and wound healing, Bu et al25 found that MFG-E8 promotes the migration of intestinal epithelial cells via a PKCε-dependent mechanism engaged by binding of MFG-E8 to phosphatidylserine. Their findings indicate that MFG-E8 is involved in the maintenance of intestinal epithelial homeostasis and the promotion of mucosal healing. The possible role of MFG-E8 in cutaneous wound healing has not been studied previously. In the present study, we analyzed skin wound healing using MFG-E8 wild-type (WT) and KO mice. We demonstrate that MFG-E8 production was increased and that MFG-E8 accumulated in granulation tissue during wound healing, and that wound healing in MFG-E8 KO mice was delayed. We relate delayed wound healing to diminished angiogenesis and myofibroblast infiltration in wounds in MFG-E8 KO mice.
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