Abstract
The blood–retinal barrier (BRB) consists of tightly interconnected capillary endothelial cells covered with pericytes and glia, but the role of the pericytes in BRB regulation is not fully understood. Here, we show that platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF)-B/PDGF receptor beta (PDGFRβ) signalling is critical in formation and maturation of BRB through active recruitment of pericytes onto growing retinal vessels. Impaired pericyte recruitment to the vessels shows multiple vascular hallmarks of diabetic retinopathy (DR) due to BRB disruption. However, PDGF-B/PDGFRβ signalling is expendable for maintaining BRB integrity in adult mice. Although selective pericyte loss in stable adult retinal vessels surprisingly does not cause BRB disintegration, it sensitizes retinal vascular endothelial cells (ECs) to VEGF-A, leading to upregulation of angiopoietin-2 (Ang2) in ECs through FOXO1 activation and triggering a positive feedback that resembles the pathogenesis of DR. Accordingly, either blocking Ang2 or activating Tie2 greatly attenuates BRB breakdown, suggesting potential therapeutic approaches to reduce retinal damages upon DR progression.
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Introduction
The blood–retinal barrier (BRB) is divided into inner and outer parts1,2. The inner part consists of tightly connected capillary endothelial cells (ECs) covered with pericytes and Müller glial cells, whose function is to nourish the inner two thirds of the retina. The outer part of the BRB consists of tightly connected pigment epithelial cells that maintain the integrity of the outer third of the retina. Pericytes differ in origin, morphology, and function depending on different organs’ vascular beds and are located between ECs and surrounding parenchymal cells, sharing a basement membrane with the endothelium3,4,5,6. They play important roles in a range of functions, including angiogenesis, vascular remodelling, regression and stabilization, and generation and maintenance of the blood–brain barrier (BBB) and BRB5,6,7. Previous studies8,9,10,11,12,13,14 revealed that proper pericyte recruitment to growing retinal and brain vessels through controlled platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF)-B/PDGF receptor beta (PDGFRβ) signalling is critical for adequate formation of the BRB and BBB. Genetic deletion of PDGF-B in ECs or its retention motif that is responsible for the retention of PDGF-B within the pericellular space in the growing retinal vessels exhibited severe vascular impairments including vascular engorgement and leakage together with improper pericyte recruitment and organization during the retinal vascular development9,12, which are similar to the events induced by a PDGFRβ blocking antibody11. These studies indicated that PDGF-B secreted from and properly retained in retinal vascular ECs recruits PDGFRβ+ pericytes to facilitate vascular growth and stabilization during vascular development. However, whether PDGF-B/PDGFRβ signalling is continuously required for adequate pericyte attachment to stable adult retinal vessels remains unclear. Moreover, why adequate pericyte attachment is critical for maintenance of BRB integrity in adult retinal vessels is unknown.
Pericyte dropout or loss is one of the hallmarks of diabetic retinopathy (DR) and it has been postulated to initiate or trigger several pathologic features including microaneurysm formation, abnormal leakage, edema and ischemia, provoking proliferative neovascularization in the retina15,16,17. Disturbance of the angiopoietin–Tie2 system is closely linked with DR pathogenesis18. Pericyte-derived angiopoietin-1 (Ang1) is known to stimulate Tie2 signalling in ECs, which may be substantial contributing factor for a stable interaction between ECs and pericytes in adult19,20,21,22. However, a concreate evidence to support this concept is not yet available. In contrast, Ang2 secreted from activated or inflamed ECs destabilizes EC–pericyte interaction by inhibiting Ang1–Tie2 signalling as a partial antagonist19. In fact, increased Ang2 in pathologic conditions, including DR, is thought to be one of the major factors causing pericyte dropout, and antagonizing Ang1–Tie2 signalling23. However, endogenous resources and the exact roles of Ang1, Ang2 and Tie2 in building up BRB during development and in the disintegrating BRB during pathologic conditions need to be better defined.
In this study, we show that PDGF-B/PDGFRβ signalling, which is critical for BRB buildup in growing retinal vessels, is dispensable for BRB integrity maintenance in adult mice. Selective pericyte loss in adult stable retinal vessels surprisingly did not result in phenotypes of BRB disintegration. The vessels did, however, show susceptibility to leakage upon external VEGF-A stimulus, which could be mediated by the elevated vascular destabilizing factors including Ang2 and VEGFR2 through transcriptional activation of FOXO1 in unstable endothelial cells. This process was inhibited by Ang2 blockade or Tie2 activation, reducing retinal damages during DR progression by inhibiting BRB disintegration.
Results
Pericyte coverage is critical for BRB maturation
To gain an insight into the role of PDGF-B/PDGFRβ signalling in BRB formation, we first examined their expression in growing retinal vessels at postnatal day 5 (P5) in the normal C57BL/J mouse. PDGF-B was abundantly and selectively expressed in ECs with the highest expression in the vascular front region, while PDGFRβ was selectively expressed in pericytes that covered most ECs except the tip ECs (Fig. 1a,b), consistent with previous findings12. Next, to deplete PDGF-B in retinal vessels in tamoxifen-inducible manner, we crossed the Pdgfbflox/flox mouse9 with the VE-cadherin-Cre-ERT2 mouse24 and produced a PdgfbiΔEC mouse (Fig. 1c). Cre-ERT2 positive but flox/flox negative littermates were defined as wild-type (WT) mice in each experiment. When PDGF-B was specifically depleted in ECs of PdgfbiΔEC mice from P5, at P12 the mice had severe hemorrhage at both the inner and outer surfaces of the retinal cup, profound accumulation of whitish inflammatory cells, retinal detachment (∼50%), enlarged but well-perfused vessels, severely impaired pericyte coverage of the vessels, microaneurysm formation, reduced ZO-1 and disarranged VE-cadherin, red blood cell (RBC) leakage, profound macrophage infiltration, little or no deep vascular plexus formation, extreme hypoxia with increased VEGF-A, and upregulation of the genes (CCL-2, CCL-3, TNF-α and VEGF-A) involved in inflammation and hypoxia in retinas compared with those of WT mice (Fig. 1c–h; Supplementary Fig. 1). These results indicate that EC-derived PDGF-B plays indispensable roles in vascular remodelling and BRB maturation through active recruitment of pericytes onto growing retinal vessels, and that impairment of PDGF-B/PDGFRβ signalling during this period exhibits multiple hallmarks of DR.
Inadequate pericyte coverage impairs BRB and vision
These findings led us to ask whether the impaired vascular features can be normalized or sustained as the mice mature. To answer this question, PDGF-B was depleted from P5 in the PdgfbiΔEC mice, and the retinas were examined at P30 (Fig. 2a). Severe hemorrhage and RBC leakage, disrupted vascular plexus formations in all three layers with poor pericyte coverage, profound macrophage infiltration, detachment of smooth muscle actin+ (SMA+) cells from retinal artery, highly increased EC apoptosis, and extreme hypoxia were still detected in the retina together with impaired vision in the PdgfbiΔEC mice (Fig. 2b–h). These data indicate that impaired BRB function caused by the initial poor pericyte coverage is permanent and beyond self-repair, and could continuously worsen neuronal function in the retina, eventually leading to blindness.
We hypothesized that severe ischemia due to the impaired vascular features might be a major driving factor in this irreversible change. To address this hypothesis, we generated an oxygen-induced retinopathy (OIR) model in the PdgfbiΔEC mice (Supplementary Fig. 2a). OIR caused more severe hemorrhage, RBC leakage, hypoxia and macrophage infiltration together with a larger avascular area but smaller neovascular tuft area in PdgfbiΔEC mice compared with WT mice (Supplementary Fig. 2b–f). Thus, adequate pericyte coverage is required to prevent BRB impairment against further vascular impairments, including severe ischemia, inflammation and oxidative stresses.
Inadequate pericyte upregulates FOXO1 and Ang2 in ECs
We then asked how inadequate pericyte coverage affects the impairments of retinal vessels and BRB. We focused on analysing the expression and roles of Ang2 and Tie2, given that these are critical factors regulating vascular stabilization and integrity. Consistent with previous reports25,26,27, Ang2 was high in the pericyte-free tip ECs but low in ECs of the phalanx and plexus, while Tie2 expression showed the opposite pattern in the normally growing retinal vessels (Fig. 3a,b). This finding led us to hypothesize that pericyte coverage per se might regulate the expression of Ang2 or Tie2 in the adjacent ECs. Intriguingly, the inadequate pericyte attachment markedly increased Ang2 but reduced Tie2 in the ECs of retinal vessels (Fig. 3c–e; Supplementary Fig. 3a,b), which is similar to the findings in advanced cancers28. Moreover, the ECs of micro-aneurysms in the pericyte-detached vessels of PdgfbiΔEC mice or those of OIR mice had relatively higher Ang2 (Fig. 3d; Supplementary Fig. 4a,b).
Because Ang2 is upregulated together with ESM1 by the enhanced transcriptional activity of forkhead box protein O1 (FOXO1)29,30,31, we examined the changes of these molecules in vivo and in vitro. Similar upregulation in the expressions of ESM1 and VEGFR2, which are highly enriched in the pericyte-uncovered tip ECs25,32, and distinct nuclear localization of FOXO1 were found in the ECs of pericyte-uncovered retinal vessels (Fig. 3f–i; Supplementary Fig. 3c). In addition, mRNA levels of Ang2 and ESM1 were increased upon Tie2 silencing in primary cultured HUVECs, and these changes were FOXO1 dependent (Supplementary Fig. 4c). Furthermore, Tie1 was reduced in the ECs of pericyte-detached retinal vessels, while soluble Tie1 (cleaved ecto-domain) was increased in the vitreous fluid of PdgfbiΔEC mice (Fig. 3h,i); these are similar to those which occur to ECs upon acute inflammation33,34. These data suggested that the ECs became unstable due to inadequate pericyte coverage, and that cleavage of Tie1 led to the suppression of Tie2 availability, which is required to inhibit Ang2 transcription by FOXO1 (refs 33, 34).
Next, to reveal whether and how pericyte coverage regulates FOXO1 and Ang2, we employed an ex vivo aortic ring assay35 using the aortas of WT and PdgfbiΔEC mice, where the mice were pre-administrated with tamoxifen before aorta harvest (Supplementary Fig. 5a). During ex vivo culture, the PDGFRβ+ pericytes were detached from the sprouts, which were reduced in number and length themselves, of the aorta of PdgfbiΔEC mice, and the pericyte-detached ECs had higher levels of Ang2 and FOXO1 as well as nuclear localization of FOXO1 (Supplementary Fig. 5b–e). In contrast, no major changes in FOXO1 or Ang2 were detected in the ECs of sprouts with intact pericytes in the aorta of WT mice (Supplementary Fig. 5d,e). Thus, pericyte detachment appears to directly upregulate and activate FOXO1 in ECs, which leads to stimulation of Ang2 expression in ECs. In fact, Chip-PCR sequencing analysis revealed that FOXO1 binding was enriched in the promoter and enhancer regions of Ang2 (Supplementary Fig. 6), indicating that FOXO1 directly regulates Ang2 expression in the destabilized ECs caused by inadequate pericyte coverage.
Pericytes of retinal vessels are not the main source of Ang1
Because pericyte-derived Ang1 contributes to vascular stabilization19,20,21,22, we investigated the expression and role of Ang1 using Ang1-GFP knock-in36 and Ang1flox/flox (ref. 37) mice in the growing retinal vessels. Unexpectedly, however, pericytes covering retinal vessels did not express Ang1, but those along choroidal vessels and neuronal cells in the ganglion cell and inner nuclear layers of the retina did (Fig. 4a–c). To confirm this unexpected finding, we generated Ang1iΔPC mice by crossing Ang1flox/flox mice37 with PDGFRβ-Cre-ERT2 mice38 (Supplementary Fig. 7a). High efficiency was shown for targeting PDGFRβ+ pericytes in retinal vessels by tamoxifen-induced Cre-mediated recombination using the PDGFRβ-Cre-ERT2 mice (Supplementary Fig. 8). Selective depletion of Ang1 in PDGFRβ+ pericytes from birth did not yield any apparent differences in gross features, growth, network, EC proliferation, RBC localization, pericyte coverage, or expression of Tie2 and Ang2 in the retinal vessels at P5 compared with those of WT mice (Supplementary Fig. 7b–d). These results clearly indicate that retinal pericytes do not produce Ang1 to regulate vascular growth and BRB maturation.
Tie2 is critical for retinal vessel growth and stabilization
In comparison, when Tie2 was specifically depleted in the ECs by crossing Tie2flox/flox mice27 with VE-Cadherin-Cre-ERT2 mice (Tie2iΔEC mice) (Fig. 5a), the retinal vessels showed moderate hemorrhage in the inner surface of the retinal cup, severely disrupted vascular network formation, enlarged diameter but short radial length, less density and branching, lack of deep vascular plexus, and profound RBC leakage and macrophage infiltration without a significant difference in pericyte coverage at P15 compared with those of WT mice (Fig. 5b–g). No normalization was observed until P30 in the retinas of Tie2iΔEC mice, which showed vascular leakage with engorged and disorganized vessels (Supplementary Fig. 9). We also noted stronger nuclear localization of FOXO1 and expression of Ang2 in the Tie2-depleted ECs of retinal vessels (Fig. 5f,g). However, when Tie2 was specifically depleted in the ECs at adulthood, no noticeable changes including vascular leakage were detected in the retinal vessels compared with those of WT mice (Supplementary Fig. 10). These results indicate that Tie2 is indispensable for vascular growth and BRB maturation in the growing retinal vessels, but is dispensable for the maintenance of BRB integrity during adulthood. In fact, lung vessels continue to require Tie2 (ref. 39), while the retinal vessels no longer require Tie2 during adulthood, suggesting that dependency on Tie2 for vascular stability and integration could be organ-specific during adulthood.
Inactivation of FOXO1 or Ang2 restores vascular impairments
To address how FOXO1-induced Ang2 upregulation contributes to vascular impairments in pericyte-uncovered retinal vessels, we crossed the Foxo1flox/flox mouse40 with the VE-cadherin-Cre-ERT2 mouse and generated the Foxo1iΔEC mouse (Fig. 6a). Then, inadequate pericyte coverage in the Foxo1iΔEC mouse was generated by intra-peritoneal administration of the PDGFRβ+ blocking antibody APB5 (ref. 11) at P1 (Fig. 6a). Foxo1iΔEC mice without APB5 treatment showed a mild impairment of vascular branching in the distal part of the retina when FOXO1 was depleted from P5 (Fig. 6b–e), but moderate impairment in sprouting angiogenesis when it was depleted from P1 (Supplementary Fig. 11). On the other hand, the findings of APB5 treatment in the retinal vessels of WT mice faithfully recapitulated those of PdgfbiΔEC mice, such as severe hemorrhage at the inner surface of the retinal cup, impaired retinal vascular network formation with engorgement, impaired radial growth, severe leakage, and retinal detachment (Fig. 6b–g). However, these vascular impairments in radial growth, vascular density and diameter, RBC leakage, retinal detachment, macrophage infiltration, and Ang2 upregulation by APB5 were greatly ameliorated in Foxo1iΔEC mice (Fig. 6b–g).
To test whether the role of Ang2 is substantial in the breakdown of BRB maturation, we additionally depleted Ang2 in the ECs at P5 after crossing Ang2flox/flox mouse41 with PdgfbiΔEC mice (Ang2:PdgfbiΔEC mice) and examined retinas at P12 (Fig. 7a). Micro-aneurysm formation, macrophage infiltration, and vascular leakage were greatly reduced in Ang2:PdgfbiΔEC mice compared with PdgfbiΔEC mice (Fig. 7b,c). Moreover, administration of Ang2-blocking antibody42 also markedly attenuated micro-aneurysm formation, vascular enlargement, and RBC leakage upon APB5 administration (Fig. 7d–f). Although it was significant, genetic deletion of Ang2 or Ang2 blockade showed milder effects on relieving the BRB impairments compared with genetic deletion of FOXO1 (Figs 6 and 7). Thus, enhanced FOXO1 transcriptional activity upon inadequate pericyte attachment seems to be substantially responsible for deteriorating BRB maturation by upregulating several vascular destabilization factors including Ang2 (refs 29, 30, 31).
Minimal effect of pericyte depletion on BRB in adult retina
To uncover the role of pericytes in stabilized retinal vessels, we first depleted PDGF-B in the ECs of PdgfbiΔEC mice by administration of tamoxifen during adulthood (Supplementary Fig. 12a). However, the depletion did not cause pericyte detachment or loss from the stabilized retinal vessels and led to no significant changes in the retinal vessels compared with those in WT mice (Supplementary Fig. 12b–f). Moreover, intra-vitreal administration of ABP5 (5 μg) into the eye of adult mice did not induce any apparent changes in the retinal vessels (Supplementary Fig. 13), implying that PDGF-B/PDGFRβ signalling is not required to maintain EC–pericyte interaction for BRB integrity during adulthood.
Second, we specifically ablated pericytes in the adult retinal vessels using DTAiΔPC mice, which were generated by crossing PDGFRβ-Cre-ERT2 mice with inducible ROSA26-diphtheria toxin A (DTA) mice43 (Fig. 8a). Induction of DTA by tamoxifen had greatly ablated PDGFRβ+ and NG2+ pericytes and SMA+ SMCs in the retinal vessels of DTAiΔPC mice 2 weeks later (Fig. 8b–e). Surprisingly, no apparent changes in vascular density or diameter in the three vascular plexus layers and no apparent vascular leakage were detected in the retinas of DTAiΔPC mice compared with those of WT mice (Fig. 8b–e). Similarly, no apparent leakage was detected in the brain, but profound leakage was found in the lung and skin of DTAiΔPC mice (Supplementary Fig. 14a–c), implying that the role of pericytes in adult blood vessels might be organ specific. Even though we elevated systemic blood pressure up to 140 mm Hg (systolic pressure) for 3 weeks by sustained administration of angiotensin II using an osmotic mini pump, vascular leakage was not detected in the retinal vessels of DTAiΔPC mice (Supplementary Fig. 14d–f). By intra-vitreal administration of tamoxifen into one side of the eye, we overcame the limitation of observation time period in DTAiΔPC mice due to early death (∼3–4 weeks). Despite ∼50% pericyte ablation, no apparent vascular remodelling and leakage were evident at 8 weeks later (Supplementary Fig. 15), which was the longest time period for observing the retinas of DTAiΔPC mice. On the other hand, impaired retinal vascular maturation together with BRB disruption, which were similar to the findings of PdgfbiΔEC mice, were observed in DTAiΔPC mice during postnatal development (Supplementary Fig. 16). These findings indicate that the regulation of pericytes on BRB could be dependent on stability of the vessels, and a sudden pericyte loss from the stabilized retinal vessels is insufficient to induce a significant alteration in the integrity of retinal vessels and BRB, and additional insults may be required to mimic the hallmarks of DR.
VEGF-A is required to recapitulate the phenotypes of DR
Given that highly increased VEGF-A is a key factor for destabilization, abnormal growth and permeability, and inflammation in the retinal vessels of DR17,44,45, we administered VEGF-A (1 μg) intra-vitreally into the eye on one side of the pericyte-detached adult DTAiΔPC mice, while bovine serum albumin (BSA) (1 μg) was intra-vitreally administered into the contralateral eye as a control in the same mouse (Fig. 9a). Intriguingly, the VEGF-A–treated retinas of DTAiΔPC mice exhibited retinal hemorrhage, tortuous and enlarged vessels, and markedly increased Ang2, VEGFR2, FOXO1 nuclear localization and vascular leakage but decreased Tie2, while the BSA-treated retinas of those mice showed no apparent abnormalities in vascular structure or permeability (Fig. 9b,c; Supplementary Fig. 17). In comparison, minor to moderate increases in Ang2 and FOXO1, but not in Tie2, were detected in retinas of DTAiΔPC mice treated with BSA, whereas increases in VEGFR2 and vascular leakage were observed in retinas of WT mice treated with VEGF-A (Fig. 9b,c; Supplementary Fig. 17). Thus, pericyte is a gatekeeper regulating FOXO1 that protects retinal vessels against stresses, injuries, and insults including excess VEGF-A.
To test whether Tie2 activation could reduce vascular leakage induced by VEGF-A in pericyte-free retinal vessels, we treated the DTAiΔPC mice with daily intra-peritoneal administration (10 mg kg−1) of Fc or ABTAA42 for 4 days just after the VEGF-A injection and analysed their retinal vessels at post-injection day 4 (Fig. 10a). Compared with Fc, ABTAA reduced vascular leakage and macrophage infiltration without restoration of pericyte coverage onto the vessels (Fig. 10b,c), which is similar to the findings reported previously11. Thus, Tie2 activation could ameliorate BRB disintegration against VEGF-A stimuli in the absence of pericytes, preventing retinal damages during DR progression.
Discussion
In this study, we demonstrate that the PDGF-B/PDGFRβ signalling is not required to maintain EC–pericyte interaction for BRB integrity during adulthood, although it is indispensable in formation and maturation of BRB through active recruitment of pericytes onto the growing retinal vessels. Moreover, strikingly, a sudden pericyte loss did not significantly disturb the stabilized, quiescent adult retinal vessels and BRB for some time. Furthermore, the pericyte-free retinal vessels were resistant to vascular leakage/hemorrhage and disruption unless the ECs were damaged by noxious stimulus, such as excess of VEGF-A. Pericyte dropout is one of the major hallmarks of DR15,16,17. A long-standing question has been whether pericyte dropout is a primary causative factor, a secondary consequence of micro-vessel abnormality, or both in the pathogenesis of DR. Our findings clearly demonstrate that pericyte dropout is not a direct causative factor for DR pathogenesis but rather is an essential factor that accelerate DR progression, further destabilizing retinal vascular ECs. In this regard, either preventing pericyte detachment or enhancing EC–pericyte interaction could be a potential therapeutic approach for ameliorating DR progression by maintaining BRB integrity and function.
In contrast to the prevailing concept6,19,20,21, we provide compelling evidence that pericytes that surround retinal vessels do not express Ang1. Despite the lack of Ang1 expression by pericytes, globally Ang1-depleted neonatal mice show reduced vascular growth and pericyte coverage in the retina37. In the context of Tie2, we showed that endothelial Tie2 plays an indispensable role in vascular development and BRB maturation. It is well-known that Ang1-induced Tie2 clustering is critical for its activation19,46,47. However, the activation of Tie2 can also be strongly induced by shear stress48, which is an independent mode of action to Ang1-induced activation. These collectively imply that Ang1 may have derived from adjacent neurons or hematopoietic cells including platelets, which subsequently activate Tie2 or integrins for its roles in formation and maturation of the inner part of the BRB, or the abnormal vascular phenotypes after endothelial Tie2 deletion can be due to the absence of Tie2 activation induced by a blood flow-mediated shear stress. Mechanistically, the gate-keeping role of intact pericyte-Tie2/Akt signalling, which suppresses FOXO1-mediated transcriptional activation of vascular destabilizing factors including Ang2 in ECs, seems central for the maintenance and protection of BRB integrity against injuries (Fig. 10d). The mechanism by which pericyte coverage regulates Tie2 can be explained in two ways. First, Tie2 shedding (cleavage of Tie2 extracellular domain) in ECs could have occurred immediately after pericyte loss, because ECs are directly exposed to a bunch of activated proteases and growth factors such as VEGF-A. In fact, VEGF-A is known to induce Tie2 shedding via a phosphatidylinositol 3 (PI3) kinase/Akt-dependent pathway to modulate Tie2 signalling49. In addition, recent elegant studies33,34,50 have revealed that inflammation-induced cleavage of the Tie1 extracellular domain leads to reduced availability and signalling of Tie2, which in turn further degrades vascular stability through FOXO1-mediated upregulation of Ang2 in the ECs of tracheal vessels. Thus, in agreement with these studies, inflammation induced by the BRB disruption after pericyte loss could also reduce functional Tie2 level and stimulate FOXO1 activation. Nevertheless, unlike FOXO1 and Ang2, the change in Tie2 upon pericyte depletion was different between growing retinal vessels and stable adult retinal vessels, implying that regulation of Tie2 by pericytes could also be dependent on vessel stability as well as its microenvironment, such as inflammation and hypoxia. PI3 kinase/Akt intracellular signalling is the main downstream pathway for Tie2 activation in ECs19,47. While PI3 kinases play key roles in the maintenance of vascular integrity and barrier function51,52, Akt also plays a vital role in maintaining vascular integrity against VEGF-induced impairments and increased permeability in blood vessels53,54,55. In fact, Akt acts as a negative regulator of FOXO1 by promoting its phosphorylation and degradation19,29. In addition, a previous study has shown that FOXO1 activity is induced together with Akt inactivation in primary cultured ECs of microvasculature under diabetic conditions56. Thus, pericyte loss-induced FOXO1 activation could be due to the reduced Tie2-mediated PI3 kinase/Akt signalling.
Upregulation of Ang2 expression and enhanced secretion of Ang2 in ECs are highly reactive processes that occur in any unstable and stimulatory conditions, including acute inflammation, chronic hyperglycemia, cerebral cavernous malformation and excess of vascular stimulating factors and cytokines, which definitively contribute to further exacerbation of vascular destabilization in a positive feedback manner57,58,59,60. Indeed, our findings clearly show that pericyte loss induces FOXO1-mediated transcriptional activation of the genes related to vascular destabilization such as Ang2, ESM1 and VEGFR2 (refs 25, 27, 29, 32), which sensitizes ECs to VEGF-A and further disintegrates BRB by a positive feedback system in retinal vessels (Fig. 10d)25,29,61,62. In fact, Ang2 per se is a positive factor for pericyte dropout in animal models of DR23,63, although its role in pericyte dropout could be overridden in a context-dependent manner as was the case in the Tie2iΔEC mice in this study (Fig. 5f). Ang2 is also detected in high levels in the vitreous fluid of patients with DR64. Moreover, a recent study60 revealed that cerebral cavernous malformation 3 deficiency in brain ECs enhances the exocytosis and secretion of Ang2, which leads to destabilization of BBB and BRB together with pericyte dropout. In the present study, our approaches with genetic deletion of Ang2 or FOXO1, or administration of Ang2 blocking antibody highlight the critical roles of both Ang2 and FOXO1 as negative regulators of EC stability in the absence of pericytes. However, neither genetic deletion nor antibody administration fully mitigated the vascular leakage caused by inadequate pericyte coverage. There could be several reasons for this partial rescue. First, there could be unidentified molecular actions or pathways that are responsible for the pericyte depletion-induced vascular leakage but independent of the action of FOXO1 or Ang2. Second, the deletion efficiency may not have been 100% to fully inactivate the actions of FOXO1 or Ang2; similarly, Ang2 blocking antibody would not have perfectly acted on all existing Ang2 due to issues with drug delivery and binding efficiencies. Nevertheless, as we and others have demonstrated65,66,67, blockade of Ang2 and VEGF-A along with Tie2 activation could be beneficial in ameliorating BRB breakdown and DR progression.
Together, this study delineates the plastic roles of PDGF-B/PDGFRβ signalling in EC–pericyte interaction depending on vessel status and identifies the critical role of the Tie2–FOXO1–Ang2 loop in pericyte dropout during BRB breakdown in the context of DR, providing clues regarding its pathogenesis and treatment.
Methods
Experimental animals
Animal care and experimental procedures were performed under the approval from the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (No. KA2015-15) of KAIST. Specific pathogen-free (SPF) C57BL/J, Pdgfbflox/flox (C57BL/J background)9, and R26-tdTomato (C57BL/J background) were purchased from the Jackson Laboratory. VE-Cadherin-Cre-ERT2 (ref. 24), Ang1flox/flox (ref. 37), Ang2flox/flox (ref. 41), Tie2flox/flox (ref. 27), Foxo1flox/flox (ref. 40), Ang1-GFP knock-in36, PDGFRβ-Cre-ERT2 (ref. 38), and ROSA26-DTA43 mice were transferred, bred in our SPF animal facilities at KAIST, and used after more than 10 generations of back-crossing into C57BL/J background. Male and female mice were not distinguished in neonatal mice (P5 to P15), and male mice were used in adult (after P28) experiments. To induce Cre activity in the Cre-ERT2 mice, tamoxifen was given at the indicated days with the following dosages and schedules: for neonatal mice, 50 μg of 4-hydroxy (4-OH) tamoxifen (Sigma, H7904) was injected into the stomach or subcutaneously daily from P1 to P3, or 100 μg daily from P5 to P7; for OIR mice, 200 μg of tamoxifen (Sigma, T5648) was injected i.p. daily from P12 to P14; for adult mice aged over 1 month, 2 mg of tamoxifen was injected i.p. for 4 consecutive days from the indicated time point. To induce Cre activity in one eye, 1 μl of 4-OH tamoxifen dissolved in DMSO (10 μg μl−1) was injected into the vitreous cavity in one eye using Nanoliter 2000 micro-injector (World Precision Instruments) fitted with a glass capillary pipette. As control, 1 μl of DMSO was injected in the same manner to the contralateral eye. Cre-ERT2 positive but flox/flox-negative mice among the littermates were defined as wild type (WT) mice for each experiment. To increase blood pressure, Angiotensin II (AT II, Calbiochem) was infused at a rate of 1.44 mg kg−1 min−1 for 3 weeks through an osmotic pump (Alzet) implanted in the subcutaneous area. All mice were bred and housed in our SPF facilities and fed with free access to a standard diet (PMI Lab diet) and water. Mice were handled in accordance with the ARVO (Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology) Statement for the Use of Animal in Ophthalmic and Vision Research.
Generation of OIR mouse model
The OIR mouse model was generated as previously reported37. Briefly, P7 mice were exposed to 75% oxygen in a hyperoxic chamber (ProOx Model 110, BioSpherix, Lacona, New York) for 5 days with their nursing mothers and then returned to room air for 5 days. Retinas were harvested at P17.
Treatment of antibody or recombinant protein
For in vivo inhibition of PDGFRβ signalling, 50 μg of APB5 (5 mg ml−1) was injected subcutaneously to neonatal mice at P1, or 5 μg of APB5 was injected intravitreally for adult mice. To administer the antibody or recombinant protein into the vitreous cavity, indicated amount of reagent in 1 μl was injected into the vitreous cavity.
Histological analyses
Immunofluorescence (IF) staining of whole-mounted retinas and retinal sections were performed as previously described37. Briefly, eyeballs were enucleated and fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde (PFA) for 20 min at room temperature (RT). For IF staining of retinal section, samples were dehydrated in 20% sucrose solution overnight, embedded in tissue freezing medium (Leica), and cut into 14 μm section. For IF staining of whole-mounted retina, after preparing the retina from eyeball, the retinas were additionally fixed in 1% PFA for 1 h at RT. Samples were blocked with 5% donkey (or goat) serum in PBST (0.3% Triton X-100 in PBS) and then incubated in blocking solution with isolectin B4 (Sigma, L2140) or following antibodies at 4 °C overnight: hamster anti-CD31 monoclonal (clone 2H8, Millipore, MAB1398Z, 1:500); rat anti-PDGFRβ monoclonal (clone APB5, eBioscience, NC0091961, 1:200); rabbit anti-NG2 monoclonal (132.39, Millipore, MAB5384, 1:200); human anti-Ang2 monoclonal (clone 4H10, 1:200)42; rat anti-TER119 monoclonal (clone TER-119, BD Pharmingen, 561033, 1:200); rat anti-F4/80 monoclonal (BM8, eBioscience, 14-4801-81, 1:200); rabbit anti-FOXO1 monoclonal (clone C29H4, Cell signaling, 2880, 1:200); rat anti-VE-cadherin monoclonal (clone 11D4.1, BD Pharmingen, 555289, 1:200); FITC-conjugated mouse anti-SMA monoclonal (clone 1A4, Sigma, F3777, 1:1,000); rabbit anti-phosphohistone H3 (PH3) polyclonal (Millipore, 05-806, 1:200); rabbit anti-caspase-3 polyclonal (R&D, AF835, 1:200); goat anti-Tie2 polyclonal (R&D, AF762, 1:200); goat anti-Tie1 polyclonal (R&D, AF619, 1:200); rabbit anti-ZO1 polyclonal (Thermo Fisher Scientific, 61-7300, 1:200); chicken anti-GFP polyclonal (Abcam, ab13970, 1:200); goat anti-ESM1 polyclonal (R&D, AF1999, 1:100); goat anti-VEGFR2 polyclonal (R&D, AF644, 1:200) antibody. After several washes, the samples were incubated for 2 h at RT with FITC-, Cy3-, or Cy5-conjugated streptavidin (BD pharmingen, 1:1,000) or the following secondary antibodies: FITC-, Cy3-, or Cy5-conjugated anti-hamster IgG, anti-rat IgG, anti-rabbit IgG, anti-human IgG, anti-chicken IgG, and anti-goat IgG (Jackson ImmunoResearch, 1:1,000). To detect hypoxic area in retinas, Hypoxyprobe-1 (60 mg kg−1; solid pimonidazole HCL, Natural Pharmacia International, Belmont, Massachusetts) was injected i.p. 1 h before enucleation. The retinas were then harvested and stained with FITC-conjugated anti-Hypoxyprobe antibody. Images of all samples were obtained using a Zeiss LSM 780 confocal microscope (Carl Zeiss). In situ hybridization (ISH) for PDGF-B on the whole-mounted retina was performed as previously described68. Briefly, after short fixation of eyeball with 2% PFA, retinas were harvested, digested with proteinase K, and postfixed for 5 min in 4% PFA/1% glutaraldehyde solution. Then, the retinas were hybridized with digoxigenin (DIG)-labelled PDGF-B cRNA probes (811-1505 of NM_011057) at 65 °C overnight and were subsequently incubated with anti-DIG-AP antibody (Roche, 11 093 274 910) at RT overnight. Colour was developed by reacting with nitroblue tetrazolium chloride (Roche, 1 087 479)/5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indoyl phosphate (Roche, 1585 002). After extensive washes with PBS, for visualization of the retinal vessels, retinas were IF stained with a rabbit anti-type IV collagen polyclonal antibody (Cosmo bio, LB-1403, 1:200) and a Cy3 conjugated anti-rabbit secondary antibody (Jackson ImmunoResearch, 1:1,000). The images of ISH and IF were taken separately and merged after pseudo-colouring using Adobe Photoshop CS software (Adobe).
Analyses of vascular leakage and perfusion
Vascular leakage was analysed by i.v. injecting 50 μl of FITC-conjugated dextran of indicated size (25 mg ml−1, 70 kDa/2,000 kDa, Sigma-Aldrich) 30 min before organ harvest, or 100 μl of Evans blue (EB) (2% in PBS; Sigma). To quantify EB leakage in different organs, the mice were perfused with PBS and organs were harvested and weighed 24 h after EB injection. Then the organs were homogenized and incubated in formamide for 24 h at 55 °C. Supernatants were collected and EB contents were measured at the absorbance of 620 nm. EB concentration per weight of wet organs were calculated from a standard curve of EB in formamide, and normalized by control and presented as fold difference. For analysis of vascular perfusion, 50 μl of DyLight 488-labelled tomato lectin (Vector laboratory, DL-1174) was i.v. injected before enucleation. Intracardiac perfusion with PBS was performed before mice sacrifice to remove circulating lectin.
Morphometric analyses
Morphometric analyses of the retina were performed using ImageJ software (http://rsb.info.nih.gov/ij) or ZEN 2012 software (Carl Zeiss). Radial length of the retinal vessels was measured as the shortest distance from the optic disc to the peripheral vascular front in each quadrant of the retina and averaged. Retinal vascular density was measured as CD31+ or IB4+ retinal vessel area divided by total measured area of the retina and presented as a percentage. Branching point was measured manually in six 0.18 mm2 fields located between an artery and a vein in each retina and averaged. Number and length of filopodias were examined in four 0.02 mm2 areas of vascular front in each retina and averaged. Vessel diameters were averaged among 10 consecutive CD31+ or iB4+ retinal vessels between an artery and a vein located within 500 μm from the optic disc. Numbers of PH3+ proliferating EC or sprouting EC were measured in four 0.18 mm2 fields of vascular front per retina and averaged. Numbers of caspase3+ EC were measured in six 0.18 mm2 fields of vascular plexus between an artery and a vein per retina and averaged. Pericyte coverage was calculated as PDGFRβ+ or NG2+ area divided by CD31+ or IB4+ area, which was then normalized by the average of those of control mice. SMC coverage was calculated as SMA+ area divided by CD31+ area. Detached SMC was calculated as area of SMA+ SMC not covering CD31+ retinal vessels divided by total SMC+ area. RBC leakage were measured as RBC-stained area outside the vessels divided by retinal area. Macrophage infiltration was measured as F4/80+ area divided by retinal area. RBC leakage and macrophage infiltration were measured in six random 0.18 mm2 fields per retina and averaged. To measure the hypoxic status of the retina, FITC-labelled Hypoxyprobe+ area was measured and divided by total retinal area and presented as a percentage. Micro-aneurysm was defined as ballooning or outpouching of CD31+ or IB4+ retinal vessels without connection with deep vascular plexus and counted in four 0.18 mm2 fields per retina and averaged. NVT area and avascular areas in OIR model were measured using the Lasso tool of Adobe Photoshop software as previously described37 and divided by total retinal area. Staining intensities were measured in four representative areas of retinal capillary vessels or, if indicated, other vascular regions in each retina and averaged. For comparison, the values were normalized by the background signals in non-vascularized areas, and their ratio were normalized by control and presented as fold or percentage. We regarded the round and condensed signal of FOXO1 immunofluorescence staining in the retinal vessels as a nuclear-localized activated form of FOXO1, in accordance to a recently published report33. Then, area of the nuclear-localized FOXO1 per CD31+ EC area was calculated using same threshold values using ImageJ software and presented as ‘nuclear FOXO1/ECs (%)’. Similarly, to quantify Ang2 or ESM1 expression, their stained area per CD31+ EC area was calculated and presented as ‘Ang2/ECs (%)’ or ‘ESM1/ECs (%)’. If needed, their values were normalized by control and presented as fold change.
Quantitative real-time RT-PCR
Total RNA was extracted using RNeasy Plus Mini kit (Qiagen) according to the manufactuer’s instruction. Total RNA was reverse transcribed into cDNA using GoScriptTM Reverse Transcription Kit (Promega). Then, quantitative real-time PCR was performed using FastStart SYBR Green Master mix (Roche) and Bio-rad S1000 Thermocycler with the indicated primers (Supplementary Tables 1 and 2). GAPDH was used as a reference gene and the results were presented as relative expressions to control.
Electroretinogram
Electroretinogram (ERG) was recorded to assess the retinal neuronal function at indicated time point. Mice were either dark- or light-adapted for 12 h before ERG monitoring, anesthetized with 15 mg kg−1 ketamine and 7 mg kg−1 xylazine, and placed on a heating pad to maintain body temperature. After pupil dilatation using tropicamide 0.5% (Mydrin P, Taejoon, Korea), cornea was placed on gold-plated objective lens and silver-embedded needle electrodes were placed at forehead (reference) and tail (ground). The ERG stimulus and recording were performed using ‘LabscribeERG v3’ software combined with ‘Phoenix Micron IV’ (Phoenix Research labs, California) retinal imaging microscope according to the manufacturer's instruction. To obtain scotopic (dark-adapted condition) a- and b-wave, a digital bandpass filter ranging from 0.3 to 1,000 Hz and stimulus ranging from −2.2 to 2.2 log(cd·s m−2) were used. To yield photopic (light-adapted condition) b-wave, filter ranging from 2 to 200 Hz and stimulus ranging from 0.4 to 2.2 log(cd·s m−2) with 1.3 log(cd·s m−2) background were used. After averaging the signals, the amplitude of the a- and b-wave were presented by the ‘LabscribeERG v3’ software and used for analyses.
Aortic ring assay
Aortic ring assay was performed as previously described35. Briefly, aortas of the mice treated with tamoxifen as scheduled were harvested at the indicated time point. After overnight serum starvation in Opti-MEM (Life Technologies), aortas were cut into 1 mm thick segments, embedded in type I collagen gel (Millipore) in a 96-well plate, and incubated with Opti-MEM containing 2% FBS (Hyclone) and 30 ng ml−1 VEGF-A (R&D) for 6 days. For immunostaining of aortic ring35, aortic ring embedded in collagen gel was fixed in 4% PFA for 10 min on ice, blocked with 5% donkey (or goat) serum in PBST (0.3% Triton X-100 in PBS) for 1 h at RT, and incubated in blocking solution with primary antibodies at 4 °C overnight. After several washes, the samples were incubated for 2 h at RT with secondary antibodies. Then, imaging was performed using Zeiss LSM 780 confocal microscope (Carl Zeiss). Number of sprouting vessel, pericyte coverage, and the signal densities of Ang2 and FOXO1 were quantified using ImageJ software.
Cell culture and siRNA transfection
HUVECs (Lonza, C2519A) were cultured in EGM2 medium (Lonza) supplemented with growth factor and serum. For silencing experiments, HUVECs were transfected with either Tie2 siRNA, FOXO1 siRNA, or control siRNA (Life Technologies) using liopfectamine RNAiMAX (Invitrogen) in Opti-MEM (Life Technologies) according to vender’s instruction. After transfection, cells were incubated until it reached 80–90% confluency before harvest for transcript analysis.
ELISA of VEGF-A and soluble Tie1 in vitreous fluid
To collect vitreous fluid in the eye, first, eyes were enucleated and washed with sterile ice cold PBS. Then, PBS around the eyes was removed using an absorbing paper. After making a small slit with a blade through the retina, vitreous fluid was collected using Nanoliter 2000 micro-injector (World Precision Instruments) fitted with a glass capillary pipette. To measure the intravitreal levels of soluble Tie1 or VEGF-A, after 40-fold dilution of vitreous sample, mouse Tie1 ELISA kit (CUSABIO, CSB-E07391m) or mouse VEGF-A ELISA kit (R&D, MMV00) were used according to the manufacturer’s instruction and measured using a Spectra MAX340 plate reader (Molecular Devices).
Chromatin immunoprecipitation-qPCR
∼5 × 106 HUVECs were harvested and fixed with 11% formaldehyde solution and quenched by 2.5 M glycine. After washing with PBS 3 times, the cells were lysed and sonicated using a Bioruptor sonicator (Diagenode). Chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) was performed using FOXO1 antibody (ab39670, Abcam, 1:100) and magnetic protein-G beads (Thermo Fisher Scientific). After several washes, reverser crosslink, DNA extraction, and qPCR were performed using input DNA and ChIP-DNA. H3K27ac HUVEC ChIP-seq data was obtained from GEO database (GSM733691)69 and analysed by Integrative Genomic Viewer (Broad Institute)70 and used to select expected enhancer regions of Ang2. The primer sequences for ChIP-qPCR are shown in Supplementary Table 3. eNOS promoter and eNOS coding sequence regions were used as positive and negative controls for FOXO1 binding30.
Statistical analyses
Sample sizes were estimated by a power analysis (‘TrialSize’ package of R3.2.3 version) to detect a 20–40% difference (δ) with a significance level (α) of 0.05 and power (β) of 0.8. Animals or samples were not randomized during experiments and not excluded from analyses. The investigators were not blinded to group allocation during experiments and outcome analyses. Values were presented as mean±standard deviation (s.d.). Statistical significance was determined by the two-sided Mann–Whitney U test between 2 groups or the Kruskal–Wallis test followed by Tukey’s honest significant difference (HSD) test with ranks for multiple-group comparison. Statistical analysis was performed using PASW statistics 18 (SPSS). Statistical significance was set to P<0.05.
Data availability
The authors declare that all relevant data of this study are included within the article and its Supplementary Information files. These are also available from the authors upon request.
Additional information
How to cite this article: Park, D. Y. et al. Plastic roles of pericytes in the blood–retinal barrier. Nat. Commun. 8, 15296 doi: 10.1038/ncomms15296 (2017).
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Acknowledgements
We thank Intae Park for proof reading of manuscript, Su Jin Seo and Mi-Jeong Kim for their technical assistances, Professor Yoshikazu Nakaoka (Osaka University) for providing Ang1flox/flox mice, Professor Ronald A. DePinho (University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center) for providing Foxo1flox/flox mice, Professor Richard M. Locksley (University of California San Francisco) for providing ROSA26-DTA mice, and Prof Akiyoshi Uemura (Nagoya City University) for providing APB5. This study was supported by the Institute of Basic Science funded by the Ministry of Science, ICT and Future Planning, Korea (IBS-R025-D1-2015, G.Y.K), and the Rita Allen Foundation and NIH R01HL132074 (L.D).
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D.Y.P., J.L., J.K., K.K., S.P.H., S.Y.H. and H.K. designed and performed the experiments and analysed the data; Y.K., H.A., L.D., J.W.K., H.K., Y.H. and R.H.A. provided the mice and critical comments on this study; D.Y.P. and G.Y.K. generated the figures and wrote and edited the manuscript; and G.Y.K. directed and supervised the project.
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Park, D., Lee, J., Kim, J. et al. Plastic roles of pericytes in the blood–retinal barrier. Nat Commun 8, 15296 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms15296
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