Evidence for developmental vascular-associated necroptosis and its contribution to venous-lymphatic endothelial differentiation

  • Han Meng
  • , Youyi Zhao
  • , Yuqian Li
  • , Hong Fan
  • , Xuyang Yi
  • , Xinyu Meng
  • , Pengfei Wang
  • , Fanfan Fu
  • , Shengxi Wu
  • , Yazhou Wang

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

During development, apoptosis removes redundant cells and ensures proper organ morphogenesis. Necrosis is long known as an adult-bound inflammatory and pathologic cell death. Whether there exists physiological necrosis during early development has been speculated but yet clearly demonstrated. Here, we report evidence of necroptosis, a type of programmed necrosis, specifically in perivascular cells of cerebral cortex and skin at the early stage of development. Phosphorylated Mixed Lineage Kinase Domain-Like protein (MLKL), a key molecule in executing necroptosis, co-expressed with blood endothelial marker CD31 and venous-lymphatic progenitor marker Sox18. Depletion of Mlkl did not affect the formation of blood vessel network but increased the differentiation of venous-lymphatic lineage cells in postnatal cerebral cortex and skin. Consistently, significant enhancement of cerebrospinal fluid diffusion and lymphatic drainage was found in brain and skin of Mlkl-deficient mice. Under hypobaric hypoxia induced cerebral edema and inflammation induced skin edema, Mlkl mutation significantly attenuated brain-blood-barrier damage and edema formation. Our data, for the first time, demonstrated the presence of physiological vascular-associated necroptosis and its potential involvement in the development of venous-lymphatic vessels.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1229788
JournalFrontiers in Cell and Developmental Biology
Volume11
DOIs
StatePublished - 2023

Keywords

  • development
  • edema
  • mlkl
  • necroptosis
  • venous-lymphatic system

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