Method Article
Normal adult vascularized mammalian tissue that lacks physiologic angiogenesis and that has not been exposed to surgical intervention is used to study: (i) the initiation and development of angiogenesis following intraperitoneal administration of test agents; and (ii) modification of angiogenesis following systemic administration of selected test agents.
The adult rat mesentery window angiogenesis assay is biologically appropriate and is exceptionally well suited to the study of sprouting angiogenesis in vivo [see review papers], which is the dominating form of angiogenesis in human tumors and non-tumor tissues, as discussed in invited review papers1,2. Angiogenesis induced in the membranous mesenteric parts by intraperitoneal (i.p.) injection of a pro-angiogenic factor can be modulated by subcutaneous (s.c.), intravenous (i.v.) or oral (p.o.) treatment with modifying agents of choice. Each membranous part of the mesentery is translucent and framed by fatty tissue, giving it a window-like appearance.
The assay has the following advantageous features: (i) the test tissue is natively vascularized, albeit sparsely, and since it is extremely thin, the microvessel network is virtually two-dimensional, which allows the entire network to be assessed microscopically in situ; (ii) in adult rats the test tissue lacks significant physiologic angiogenesis, which characterizes most normal adult mammalian tissues; the degree of native vascularization is, however, correlated with age, as discussed in1; (iii) the negligible level of trauma-induced angiogenesis ensures high sensitivity; (iv) the assay replicates the clinical situation, as the angiogenesis-modulating test drugs are administered systemically and the responses observed reflect the net effect of all the metabolic, cellular, and molecular alterations induced by the treatment; (v) the assay allows assessments of objective, quantitative, unbiased variables of microvascular spatial extension, density, and network pattern formation, as well as of capillary sprouting, thereby enabling robust statistical analyses of the dose-effect and molecular structure-activity relationships; and (vi) the assay reveals with high sensitivity the toxic or harmful effects of treatments in terms of decreased rate of physiologic body-weight gain, as adult rats grow robustly.
Mast-cell-mediated angiogenesis was first demonstrated using this assay3,4. The model demonstrates a high level of discrimination regarding dosage-effect relationships and the measured effects of systemically administered chemically or functionally closely related drugs and proteins, including: (i) low-dosage, metronomically administered standard chemotherapeutics that yield diverse, drug-specific effects (i.e., angiogenesis-suppressive, neutral or angiogenesis-stimulating activities5); (ii) natural iron-unsaturated human lactoferrin, which stimulates VEGF-A-mediated angiogenesis6, and natural iron-unsaturated bovine lactoferrin, which inhibits VEGF-A-mediated angiogenesis7; and (iii) low-molecular-weight heparin fractions produced by various means8,9. Moreover, the assay is highly suited to studies of the combined effects on angiogenesis of agents that are administered systemically in a concurrent or sequential fashion.
The idea of making this video originated from the late Dr. Judah Folkman when he visited our laboratory and witnessed the methodology being demonstrated.
Review papers (invited) discussing and appraising the assay
Norrby, K. In vivo models of angiogenesis. J. Cell. Mol. Med. 10, 588-612 (2006).
Norrby, K. Drug testing with angiogenesis models. Expert Opin. Drug. Discov. 3, 533-549 (2008).
1. Animals
We work in a high-standard animal care facility and considerable efforts are made to minimize the levels of stress experienced by the animals. The current ethical guidelines are those established by Workman P. et al. (Guidelines for the welfare and use of animals in cancer research. Br. J. Cancer 102, 1555-77, 2010). The Animal Ethics Committee of the University of Gothenburg approved these studies.
2. Pro-angiogenic Intraperitoneal Treatment
3. Systemic Administation of Angiogenesis-modulating Agents
4. Ending the Experiment
5. Harvesting Tissue Samples
It should be mentioned that the tissue and patent vasculature can be visualized prior to harvest with transmitted light intravital microscopy.
6. Protocol for Immunohistochemical Staining of Microvessels
7. Imaging and Assessing the Microvascular Network in Each Mesenteric Window Specimen After Immunohistochemical Staining of Vascular Endothelial Cells
As shown in the movie, microvessels are microscopically visualized in situ in the intact tissue.
8. Statistical Analysis
We usually use the standard non-parametric Mann-Whitney U-test to analyze unpaired (two-tailed) observations. A mean of four mesenteric windows per animal is used as the independent data-point for each variable of the mesenteric window. The criterion for statistical significance is P ≤ 0.05.
The assay was introduced in 19863 and has successively been further developed and refined in our laboratory7,10-12. As discussed in review papers (invited)1, 2, the assay compares well with other mammalian in vivo angiogenesis assay in regard particularly to important features such as the adult test tissue is natively vascularized and lacks physiologic angiogenesis; minimal trauma, if any, is inflicted upon the tissue; truly quantitative variables are measured, which allows sound statistical analysis regarding dose-response and molecular-activity studies; sprouting angiogenesis occurs, which is predominating in normal tissues and tumors; and toxicity data are easily accumulated in rats that grow robustly physiologically in adulthood. Disadvantageous features may include the fact that the assay is relatively time-consuming, especially when assessing the number and length of individual microvessel segments and microvessel sprouts; that it does not allow real-time/serial observations; and that it is hardly suitable for mice since many mesenteric windows in mice lack potential parent microvessels from which new capillaries can originate.
Real-time observations are, however, enabled by intravital microscopy where the exteriorized but intact mesenteric windows are splayed out over a microscope stage while the animal is anesthetized, as discussed in1.
Significant advances in angiogenesis research have been achieved in the past decades using models such as the corneal micropocket, chick chorioallantoic membrane, and s.c. Matrigel plug assays, which are useful but ultimately limited tools. Future clinical applications of anti-angiogenic and pro-angiogenic therapies necessitate the establishment and validation of more sensitive and biologically relevant, truly quantitative pre-clinical models, such as the one described in the current report.
No conflicts of interest declared.
Financial support for most of the studies was provided by the Swedish Medical Research Council (grant 5942).
Name | Company | Catalog Number | Comments |
Buffers and reagents | |||
0.5 M Tris-HCl (pH 7.8) stock solution Tris (hydroxymethyl) aminomethan (60.57 g) is dissolved in ~900 ml aqua dest and ~45 ml of 25% HCl (concentrated) is added to achieve pH 7.8 followed by dilution to 1 liter with aqua dest. | |||
Tris-buffer saline (TBS; pH 7.8) To 200 ml of the stock solution is added 18 g NaCl dissolved in ~1800 ml aqua dest with adjustment of pH to 7.8 using the stock solution, followed by dilution to 2 liter with aqua dest. | |||
TBS (pH 7.4) To 200 ml of the stock solution is added 18 g NaCl dissolved in dissolved in ~1800 ml aqua dest with adjustment of pH to 7.4 using the stock solution, followed by dilution to 2 liter with aqua dest. | |||
Trypsin solution (0.05% trypsin, 0.1% CaCl2) Contains 0.1 g trypsin and 0.2 g CaCl2 in 200 ml TBS (pH 7.8). | |||
Sucrose solution 2.5% Contains 5 g sucrose in 200 ml TBS (pH 7.8). | |||
Stock solution of 1% Sodium azide in TBS (pH 7.4) Contains 1 g Na-azide in 100 ml with TBS (pH 7.4). | |||
Diluting buffer: 0.1% BSA, 0.01% Na-azide (Used to dilute antibodies in the Vectastain ABC kit). Contains 0.1 g bovine serum albumin (BSA) and 1 ml of 1% Na-azide, diluted to 100 ml with TBS (pH 7.4). | |||
ABC kit Vectastain PK 4002, ABC peroxidase mouse IgG Normal horse serum; blocking serum; yellow solution: 3 drops/10 ml dilution buffer. Biotinylated antibody; anti-mouse IgG; blue solution: 1 drop/10 ml dilution buffer. ABC-reagent: orange solution, 2 drops plus brown solution 2 drops/10 ml TBS (pH 7.4). | |||
Mix these solutions 20 minutes before use! | |||
Mouse (monoclonal) anti-rat endothelium(Biosource International, Camarillo, CA, U.S.A.) | |||
This antibody is directed against all vascular endothelial cells in the rat, with the exception of those in the brain. | |||
Vectastain peroxidase Avidin Biotin Complex (ABC) kit The kit contains primary antibody, biotinylated secondary antibody, avidin-biotinylated enzyme complex (ABC), and enzyme substrate. See www.vectorlabs.com or www.immunkemi.se for protocols. | |||
Bovine serum albumin(BSA) (Sigma-Aldrich, catalog # A-4503). DAB= 3,3’-Diaminobenzidine Isopac (Sigma-Aldrich, catalog # D 9015). Trypsinfrom Bovine Pancreas (Sigma-Aldrich, catalog # T 4665). Vectastain peroxidase ABC-kit, Mouse IgG (Immunkemi F & D AB, Jarfalla, Sweden) |
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