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Disruption of negative feedback loop between vasohibin‐1 and vascular endothelial growth factor decreases portal pressure, angiogenesis, and fibrosis in cirrhotic rats
Author(s) -
Coch Laura,
Mejias Marc,
Berzigotti Annalisa,
GarciaPras Ester,
Gallego Javier,
Bosch Jaime,
Mendez Raul,
Fernandez Mercedes
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
hepatology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.488
H-Index - 361
eISSN - 1527-3350
pISSN - 0270-9139
DOI - 10.1002/hep.26995
Subject(s) - angiogenesis , cirrhosis , portal hypertension , vascular endothelial growth factor , hepatic stellate cell , cancer research , portal venous pressure , medicine , pathology , neovascularization , fibrosis , vegf receptors
Pathological angiogenesis represents a critical hallmark for chronic liver diseases. Understanding the mechanisms regulating angiogenesis is essential to develop new therapeutic strategies that specifically target pathological angiogenesis without affecting physiological angiogenesis. Here we investigated the contribution and therapeutic impact of the endogenous angioinhibitor vasohibin‐1 in portal hypertension and cirrhosis. The spatiotemporal expression profiling of vasohibin‐1 and its relationship with vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), angiogenesis, and fibrogenesis was determined through the analysis of human cirrhotic liver specimens, widely accepted in vivo animal models of portal hypertension and cirrhosis, and in vitro angiogenesis assays. Effects of vasohibin‐1 overexpression by adenoviral‐mediated gene transfer on angiogenesis, fibrogenesis, and portal hypertension‐associated hemodynamic alterations were also studied in rats. We found that vasohibin‐1 and VEGF are up‐regulated, in mesentery and liver, in cirrhotic and precirrhotic portal hypertensive rats and cirrhosis patients. Our results are consistent with vasohibin‐1/VEGF cascades being spatially and temporally coordinated through a negative‐feedback loop driving pathological angiogenesis. Paradoxically, further overexpression of vasohibin‐1 by adenoviral gene transfer exerts multifold beneficial effects in portal hypertension and cirrhosis: reduction of pathologic angiogenesis, attenuation of liver fibrogenesis partly mediated through inhibition of hepatic stellate cell activation, and significant decreases in portocollateralization, splanchnic blood flow, portohepatic resistance, and portal pressure. The explanation for this apparent contradiction is that, unlike endogenous vasohibin‐1, the ectopic overexpression is not regulated by VEGF and therefore disrupts the negative‐feedback loop, thus generating constant, but lower levels of VEGF synthesis sufficient to maintain vascular homeostasis but not pathological angiogenesis. Conclusion : Our study provides evidence that vasohibin‐1 regulates portal hypertension‐associated pathological angiogenesis and highlights that increasing vasohibin‐1 might be a promising novel therapeutic strategy for portal hypertension and cirrhosis. (H epatology 2014;60:633–647)

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