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Vascular endothelial growth factor signaling in VE-cadherin expression and tube-like formation by rheumatoid arthritic synovial fibroblast-like cells.

An increase in the vasculature is one of most representative changes in the synovial tissue of joints in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and is closely associated with disease progression. Although the vasculatures are believed to be a result of VE-cadherin-dependent angiogenesis and a possible therapeutic target of the disease, synovial fibroblastic cells express VE-cadherin and form tube-like structures, suggesting that vasculatures in RA synovium may not simply result from angiogenesis. This paper analyzes a mechanism of VE-cadherin expression by rheumatoid arthritic synovial fibroblast-like cells (RSFLs) and their involvement in the tube-like formation. A representative angiogenic factor, vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), and its binding to a predominant receptor (VEGFR2) activated VE-cadherin expression and the signaling pathways of ERK/MAPK and PI3K/AKT/mTOR. Treatment of RSFLs with signaling pathway inhibitors, VEGFR2 siRNA and a VEGF-antagonizing mimicking peptide inhibited VE-cadherin expression dose-dependently. VEGF-stimulated tube-like formation by RSFLs on Matrigel was hindered by the mimicking peptide and inhibitor treatment. This data demonstrates that RSFLs activated by VEGF binding of VEGFR2 express VE-cadherin and formed tube-like structure under the control of ERK/MAPK and PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathways suggesting that the inhibition suppresses vascular development in RA synovium.

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