VEGF-Directed Blood Vessel Patterning: From Cells to Organism

  1. Victoria L. Bautch
  1. Department of Biology, Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center, McAllister Heart Institute, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599
  1. Correspondence: bautch{at}med.unc.edu

Abstract

VEGF-A signaling is required for almost every aspect of vascular development, and it is a major regulator of vessel morphogenesis and patterning. VEGF-A perturbations are associated with severe vascular defects and lethality, and the pathway is coopted in pathological scenarios, including tumor angiogenesis. This review focuses on the roles of VEGF-A signaling during vessel development and patterning. I review the impact of VEGF-A signaling on endothelial cells in developing vessels, with emphasis on the importance of spatial regulation of several pathway components. I also discuss VEGF-A signaling patterns at the level of the vessel, with a focus on how polarity is set up and maintained in several vessel axes. The role of VEGF-A in patterning vessels relative to tissues and organs is also reviewed, with emphasis on neurovascular patterning and patterning at the embryonic midline.

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