INSTITUT DE BIOLOGIE DU DEVELOPPEMENT DE MARSEILLE

Actualités

Astrocyte-intrinsic and –extrinsic activities of the Fat1 cadherin regulate astrocyte development and angiogenesis in the mouse retina

The Helmbacher team identified the Fat1 Cadherin as a novel regulator of retinal vascular integrity, and investigated the underlying mechanisms.
Date de publication

Endothelial cells (ECs) are the building blocks of blood vessels, which assemble and grow through a process called angiogenesis. In the retina, angiogenesis is driven by a cross-talk between ECs and local cell types such as astrocytes or neurons. Retinal ECs form vessels during the first postnatal week, by migrating on a carpet of astrocytes, which migrate ahead of them, in a radially polarized direction (from the center to the periphery). The two migration events are coupled by known mechanisms involving patterned regulation of morphogenetic signals produced by astrocyte and endothelial cells. Thus, any alteration of astrocyte migration also interferes with angiogenic progression in the retina.

The Helmbacher team identified the Fat1 Cadherin as a novel regulator of retinal vascular integrity, and investigated the underlying mechanisms. A new study published in Development describes how a combination of astrocyte-intrinsic and extrinsic Fat1 activities (deciphered owing to tissue-specific and inducible genetic tools) influences retinal vascular development by modulating astrocyte migration polarity, proliferation, and maturation.

To know more

Helmbacher F. Astrocyte-intrinsic and -extrinsic Fat1 activities regulate astrocyte development and angiogenesis in the retina. Development. 2022 Jan 15;149(2):dev192047. doi: 10.1242/dev.192047.

Contact

Françoise Helmbacher

Categories

Lastest publications

And yet it diffuses!

Free diffusion of Wnt ligands can polarize target cells at distance in C. elegans embryos.

SEMINARS

Juna Como

Actin is a cytoskeletal protein that is conserved in all

JOB OPPORTUNITIES

TWITTER

24/04/2024

And yet it diffuses!

Free diffusion of Wnt ligands can polarize target cells at distance in C. elegans embryos.