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Dive into the research topics where Bàrbara Laviña is active.

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Featured researches published by Bàrbara Laviña.


Nature | 2018

A molecular atlas of cell types and zonation in the brain vasculature

Michael Vanlandewijck; Liqun He; Maarja Andaloussi Mäe; Johanna Andrae; Koji Ando; Francesca Del Gaudio; Khayrun Nahar; Thibaud Lebouvier; Bàrbara Laviña; Leonor Gouveia; Ying Sun; Elisabeth Raschperger; Markus Räsänen; Yvette Zarb; Naoki Mochizuki; Annika Keller; Urban Lendahl; Christer Betsholtz

Cerebrovascular disease is the third most common cause of death in developed countries, but our understanding of the cells that compose the cerebral vasculature is limited. Here, using vascular single-cell transcriptomics, we provide molecular definitions for the principal types of blood vascular and vessel-associated cells in the adult mouse brain. We uncover the transcriptional basis of the gradual phenotypic change (zonation) along the arteriovenous axis and reveal unexpected cell type differences: a seamless continuum for endothelial cells versus a punctuated continuum for mural cells. We also provide insight into pericyte organotypicity and define a population of perivascular fibroblast-like cells that are present on all vessel types except capillaries. Our work illustrates the power of single-cell transcriptomics to decode the higher organizational principles of a tissue and may provide the initial chapter in a molecular encyclopaedia of the mammalian vasculature.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Gpr116 Receptor Regulates Distinctive Functions in Pneumocytes and Vascular Endothelium

Colin Niaudet; Jennifer J. Hofmann; Maarja Andaloussi Mäe; Bongnam Jung; Konstantin Gaengel; Michael Vanlandewijck; Elisabet Ekvärn; M. Dolores Salvado; Annika Mehlem; Sahar Al Sayegh; Liqun He; Thibaud Lebouvier; Marco Castro-Freire; Kan Katayama; Kjell Hultenby; Christine Moessinger; Philip Tannenberg; Sara I. Cunha; Kristian Pietras; Bàrbara Laviña; JongWook Hong; Tove Berg; Christer Betsholtz

Despite its known expression in both the vascular endothelium and the lung epithelium, until recently the physiological role of the adhesion receptor Gpr116/ADGRF5 has remained elusive. We generated a new mouse model of constitutive Gpr116 inactivation, with a large genetic deletion encompassing exon 4 to exon 21 of the Gpr116 gene. This model allowed us to confirm recent results defining Gpr116 as necessary regulator of surfactant homeostasis. The loss of Gpr116 provokes an early accumulation of surfactant in the lungs, followed by a massive infiltration of macrophages, and eventually progresses into an emphysema-like pathology. Further analysis of this knockout model revealed cerebral vascular leakage, beginning at around 1.5 months of age. Additionally, endothelial-specific deletion of Gpr116 resulted in a significant increase of the brain vascular leakage. Mice devoid of Gpr116 developed an anatomically normal and largely functional vascular network, surprisingly exhibited an attenuated pathological retinal vascular response in a model of oxygen-induced retinopathy. These data suggest that Gpr116 modulates endothelial properties, a previously unappreciated function despite the pan-vascular expression of this receptor. Our results support the key pulmonary function of Gpr116 and describe a new role in the central nervous system vasculature.


Current Opinion in Hematology | 2015

New imaging methods and tools to study vascular biology.

Bàrbara Laviña; Konstantin Gaengel

Purpose of reviewThroughout history, development of novel microscopy techniques has been of fundamental importance to advance the vascular biology field.This review offers a concise summary of the most recently developed imaging techniques and discusses how they can be applied to vascular biology. In addition, we reflect upon the most important fluorescent reporters for vascular research that are currently available. Recent findingsRecent advances in light sheet-based imaging techniques now offer the ability to live image the vascular system in whole organs or even in whole animals during development and in pathological conditions with a satisfactory spatial and temporal resolution. Conversely, super resolution microscopy now allows studying cellular processes at a near-molecular resolution. SummaryMajor recent improvements in a number of imaging techniques now allow study of vascular biology in ways that could not be considered previously. Researchers now have well-developed tools to specifically examine the dynamic nature of vascular development during angiogenic sprouting, remodeling and regression as well as the vascular responses in disease situations in vivo. In addition, open questions in endothelial and lymphatic cell biology that require subcellular resolution such as actin dynamics, junctional complex formation and stability, vascular permeability and receptor trafficking can now be approached with high resolution.


Scientific Data | 2018

Single-cell RNA sequencing of mouse brain and lung vascular and vessel-associated cell types

Liqun He; Michael Vanlandewijck; Maarja Andaloussi Mäe; Johanna Andrae; Koji Ando; Francesca Del Gaudio; Khayrun Nahar; Thibaud Lebouvier; Bàrbara Laviña; Leonor Gouveia; Ying Sun; Elisabeth Raschperger; Åsa Segerstolpe; Jianping Liu; Sonja Gustafsson; Markus Räsänen; Yvette Zarb; Naoki Mochizuki; Annika Keller; Urban Lendahl; Christer Betsholtz

Vascular diseases are major causes of death, yet our understanding of the cellular constituents of blood vessels, including how differences in their gene expression profiles create diversity in vascular structure and function, is limited. In this paper, we describe a single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) dataset that defines vascular and vessel-associated cell types and subtypes in mouse brain and lung. The dataset contains 3,436 single cell transcriptomes from mouse brain, which formed 15 distinct clusters corresponding to cell (sub)types, and another 1,504 single cell transcriptomes from mouse lung, which formed 17 cell clusters. In order to allow user-friendly access to our data, we constructed a searchable database (http://betsholtzlab.org/VascularSingleCells/database.html). Our dataset constitutes a comprehensive molecular atlas of vascular and vessel-associated cell types in the mouse brain and lung, and as such provides a strong foundation for future studies of vascular development and diseases.


Development | 2018

Defective endothelial cell migration in the absence of Cdc42 leads to capillary-venous malformations

Bàrbara Laviña; Marco Castro; Colin Niaudet; Bert Cruys; Alberto Álvarez-Aznar; Peter Carmeliet; Katie Bentley; Cord Brakebusch; Christer Betsholtz; Konstantin Gaengel

ABSTRACT Formation and homeostasis of the vascular system requires several coordinated cellular functions, but their precise interplay during development and their relative importance for vascular pathologies remain poorly understood. Here, we investigated the endothelial functions regulated by Cdc42 and their in vivo relevance during angiogenic sprouting and vascular morphogenesis in the postnatal mouse retina. We found that Cdc42 is required for endothelial tip cell selection, directed cell migration and filopodia formation, but dispensable for cell proliferation or apoptosis. Although the loss of Cdc42 seems generally compatible with apical-basal polarization and lumen formation in retinal blood vessels, it leads to defective endothelial axial polarization and to the formation of severe vascular malformations in capillaries and veins. Tracking of Cdc42-depleted endothelial cells in mosaic retinas suggests that these capillary-venous malformations arise as a consequence of defective cell migration, when endothelial cells that proliferate at normal rates are unable to re-distribute within the vascular network. Highlighted Article: Vascular malformations can arise as a consequence of defective cell migration in areas in which proliferation is naturally high, as endothelial cells are unable to re-distribute within the vascular network.


Nature | 2018

Author Correction: A molecular atlas of cell types and zonation in the brain vasculature

Michael Vanlandewijck; Liqun He; Maarja Andaloussi Mäe; Johanna Andrae; Koji Ando; Francesca Del Gaudio; Khayrun Nahar; Thibaud Lebouvier; Bàrbara Laviña; Leonor Gouveia; Ying Sun; Elisabeth Raschperger; Markus Räsänen; Yvette Zarb; Naoki Mochizuki; Annika Keller; Urban Lendahl; Christer Betsholtz

In Fig. 1b of this Article, ‘Csf1r’ was misspelt ‘Csfr1’. In addition, in Extended Data Fig. 11b, owing to an error during figure formatting, the genes listed in the first column shifted down three rows below the first gene on the list, causing a mismatch between the gene names and their characteristics. These errors have been corrected online, and the original Extended Data Fig. 11b is provided as Supplementary Information to the accompanying Amendment.


American Journal of Physiology-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | 2018

Extracellular retention of PDGF-B directs vascular remodeling in mouse hypoxia-induced pulmonary hypertension

Philip Tannenberg; Ya-Ting Chang; Lars Muhl; Bàrbara Laviña; Hanna Gladh; Guillem Genové; Christer Betsholtz; Erika Folestad; Karin Tran-Lundmark

Pulmonary hypertension (PH) is a lethal condition, and current vasodilator therapy has limited effect. Antiproliferative strategies targeting platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) receptors, such as imatinib, have generated promising results in animal studies. Imatinib is, however, a nonspecific tyrosine kinase inhibitor and has in clinical studies caused unacceptable adverse events. Further studies are needed on the role of PDGF signaling in PH. Here, mice expressing a variant of PDGF-B with no retention motif ( Pdgfbret/ret), resulting in defective binding to extracellular matrix, were studied. Following 4 wk of hypoxia, right ventricular systolic pressure, right ventricular hypertrophy, and vascular remodeling were examined. Pdgfbret/ret mice did not develop PH, as assessed by hemodynamic parameters. Hypoxia did, however, induce vascular remodeling in Pdgfbret/ret mice; but unlike the situation in controls where the remodeling led to an increased concentric muscularization of arteries, the vascular remodeling in Pdgfbret/ret mice was characterized by a diffuse muscularization, in which cells expressing smooth muscle cell markers were found in the interalveolar septa detached from the normally muscularized intra-acinar vessels. Additionally, fewer NG2-positive perivascular cells were found in Pdgfbret/ret lungs, and mRNA analyses showed significantly increased levels of Il6 following hypoxia, a known promigratory factor for pericytes. No differences in proliferation were detected at 4 wk. This study emphasizes the importance of extracellular matrix-growth factor interactions and adds to previous knowledge of PDGF-B in PH pathobiology. In summary, Pdgfbret/ret mice have unaltered hemodynamic parameters following chronic hypoxia, possibly secondary to a disorganized vascular muscularization.


Developmental Cell | 2012

The sphingosine-1-phosphate receptor S1PR1 restricts sprouting angiogenesis by regulating the interplay between VE-cadherin and VEGFR2

Konstantin Gaengel; Colin Niaudet; Kazuhiro Hagikura; Bàrbara Laviña; Lars Muhl; Jennifer J. Hofmann; Lwaki Ebarasi; Staffan Nyström; Simin Rymo; Long Long Chen; Mei-Fong Pang; Yi Jin; Elisabeth Raschperger; Pernilla Roswall; Dörte Schulte; Rui Benedito; Jimmy Larsson; Mats Hellström; Jonas Fuxe; Per Uhlén; Ralf H. Adams; Lars Jakobsson; Arindam Majumdar; Dietmar Vestweber; Anne Uv; Christer Betsholtz


Scientific Reports | 2018

Characterization of multi-cellular dynamics of angiogenesis and vascular remodelling by intravital imaging of the wounded mouse cornea

Yixin Wang; Yi Jin; Bàrbara Laviña; Lars Jakobsson


Archive | 2018

Alternative lymphatic endothelial progenitor cells compensate for the loss of non-venous-derived progenitors to form mesenteric lymphatic vessels

Yang Zhang; Simon Stritt; Ines Martinez-Corral; Bàrbara Laviña; Christer Betsholtz; Taija Mäkinen

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Elisabeth Raschperger

Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research

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