Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2175063 Developmental Biology 2007 14 Pages PDF
Abstract

Genetic studies show that TGFβ signaling is essential for vascular development, although the mechanism through which this pathway operates is incompletely understood. Here we demonstrate that the TGFβ auxiliary coreceptor endoglin (eng, CD105) is expressed in a subset of neural crest stem cells (NCSCs) in vivo and is required for their myogenic differentiation. Overexpression of endoglin in the neural crest caused pericardial hemorrhaging, correlating with altered vascular smooth muscle cell investment in the walls of major vessels and upregulation of smooth muscle α-actin protein levels. Clonogenic differentiation assay of NCSCs derived from neural tube explants demonstrated that only NCSC expressing high levels of endoglin (NCSCCD105+) had myogenic differentiation potential. Furthermore, myogenic potential was deficient in NCSCs obtained from endoglin null embryos. Expression of endoglin in NCSCs declined with age, coinciding with a reduction in both smooth muscle differentiation potential and TGFβ1 responsiveness. These findings demonstrate a cell autonomous role for endoglin in smooth muscle cell specification contributing to vascular integrity.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology Cell Biology
Authors
, , , , , , ,