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Comparative Approaches to Characterization of Lymphatic Endothelial Cells as Phenotypically Distinct from Blood Endothelial Cells

The lymphatic system complements the blood circulatory system in absorption and transport of nutrients, and in the maintenance of homeostasis. Historically, the angiogenesis field has advanced faster and farther than the field of lymphangiogenesis. The discovery of lymphatic markers and the emerging evidence implicating the lymphatic system as a central player in a variety of pathological conditions has attracted research interest and driven the field forward. Research efforts have produced the observation that regulators of the blood endothelium are frequently members of the same protein families of regulators of the lymphatic endothelium. More importantly, these regulators do not act discretely, restricting their regulatory activities to one endothelial cell (EC) type. Two examples of regulators that behave in this manner are the VEGF and the Angiopoietin families of proteins, which have cell-type-dependent effects on EC processes such as migration, proliferation and survival. The study of these regulators therefore requires an in vitro EC system capable of accommodating the simultaneous characterization of the signaling pathways downstream of these shared molecular regulators in venous, arterial and lymphatic endotheliums. To build such an in vitro system, I isolated and validated lymphatic, venous, and arterial ECs derived from vessels of bovine mesentery. The proteomes of the three cell types were comparatively studied using two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis followed by mass spectrometric identification. The three cell types were used in a subtractive immunization scheme for the production of a monoclonal antibody selectively reactive to a potentially novel surface protein marker of lymphatic ECs. The studies recorded herein all share the common goal of identifying and characterizing unique molecular signatures that distinguish lymphatic ECs from blood ECs, and that may underline the cellular biology of the lymphatic endothelium as distinct from the blood endothelium.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:TORONTO/oai:tspace.library.utoronto.ca:1807/26216
Date17 February 2011
CreatorsNguyen, Victoria
ContributorsDumont, Daniel Joseph
Source SetsUniversity of Toronto
Languageen_ca
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis

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