Letter

Nature 442, 453-456 (27 July 2006) | doi:10.1038/nature04923; Received 19 January 2006; Accepted 19 May 2006; Published online 21 June 2006; Corrected 7 July 2006

Endothelial tubes assemble from intracellular vacuoles in vivo

Makoto Kamei1, W. Brian Saunders3, Kayla J. Bayless3, Louis Dye2, George E. Davis3 and Brant M. Weinstein1

The formation of epithelial tubes is crucial for the proper development of many different tissues and organs, and occurs by means of a variety of different mechanisms1. Morphogenesis of seamless, properly patterned endothelial tubes is essential for the development of a functional vertebrate circulatory system, but the mechanism of vascular lumenization in vivo remains unclear. Evidence dating back more than 100 years has hinted at an important function for endothelial vacuoles in lumen formation2. More than 25 years ago, in some of the first endothelial cell culture experiments in vitro, Folkman and Haudenschild described "longitudinal vacuoles" that "appeared to be extruded and connected from one cell to the next"3, 4, observations confirmed and extended by later studies in vitro showing that intracellular vacuoles arise from integrin-dependent and cdc42/Rac1-dependent pinocytic events downstream of integrin–extracellular-matrix signalling interactions5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10. Despite compelling data supporting a model for the assembly of endothelial tubes in vitro through the formation and fusion of vacuoles, conclusive evidence in vivo has been lacking, primarily because of difficulties associated with imaging the dynamics of subcellular endothelial vacuoles deep within living animals. Here we use high-resolution time-lapse two-photon imaging of transgenic zebrafish to examine how endothelial tubes assemble in vivo, comparing our results with time-lapse imaging of human endothelial-cell tube formation in three-dimensional collagen matrices in vitro. Our results provide strong support for a model in which the formation and intracellular and intercellular fusion of endothelial vacuoles drives vascular lumen formation.

  1. Laboratory of Molecular Genetics, and
  2. Microscopy and Imaging Core, National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892, USA
  3. Department of Pathology, Texas A&M University System Health Science Center, 208 Reynolds Medical Building, College Station, Texas 77843-1114, USA

Correspondence to: Brant M. Weinstein1 Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to B.M.W. (bw96w@nih.gov).

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