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Agent‐based computational model of retinal angiogenesis simulates microvascular network morphology as a function of pericyte coverage
Author(s) -
Walpole Joseph,
Mac Gabhann Feilim,
Peirce Shayn M,
Chappell John C
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
microcirculation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.793
H-Index - 83
eISSN - 1549-8719
pISSN - 1073-9688
DOI - 10.1111/micc.12393
Subject(s) - pericyte , angiogenesis , retinal , neuroscience , microbiology and biotechnology , context (archaeology) , biology , endothelial stem cell , cancer research , in vitro , biochemistry , paleontology
Objective Define a role for perivascular cells during developmental retinal angiogenesis in the context of EC Notch1‐ DLL 4 signaling at the multicellular network level. Methods The retinal vasculature is highly sensitive to growth factor‐mediated intercellular signaling. Although EC signaling has been explored in detail, it remains unclear how PC function to modulate these signals that lead to a diverse set of vascular network patterns in health and disease. We have developed an ABM of retinal angiogenesis that incorporates both ECs and PCs to investigate the formation of vascular network patterns as a function of pericyte coverage. We use our model to test the hypothesis that PC modulate Notch1‐ DLL 4 signaling in endothelial cell‐endothelial cell interactions. Results Agent‐based model ( ABM ) simulations that include PCs more accurately predict experimentally observed vascular network morphologies than simulations that lack PCs, suggesting that PCs may influence sprouting behaviors through physical blockade of endothelial intercellular connections. Conclusions This study supports a role for PCs as a physical buffer to signal propagation during vascular network formation—a barrier that may be important for generating healthy microvascular network patterns.