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Dive into the research topics where Eleanor J. Manseau is active.

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Featured researches published by Eleanor J. Manseau.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2002

Vascular Permeability Factor/Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor Induces Lymphangiogenesis as well as Angiogenesis

Janice A. Nagy; Eliza Vasile; Dian Feng; Christian Sundberg; Lawrence F. Brown; Michael Detmar; Joel Lawitts; Laura E. Benjamin; Xiaolian Tan; Eleanor J. Manseau; Ann M. Dvorak; Harold F. Dvorak

Vascular permeability factor/vascular endothelial growth factor (VPF/VEGF, VEGF-A) is a multifunctional cytokine with important roles in pathological angiogenesis. Using an adenoviral vector engineered to express murine VEGF-A164, we previously investigated the steps and mechanisms by which this cytokine induced the formation of new blood vessels in adult immunodeficient mice and demonstrated that the newly formed blood vessels closely resembled those found in VEGF-A–expressing tumors. We now report that, in addition to inducing angiogenesis, VEGF-A164 also induces a strong lymphangiogenic response. This finding was unanticipated because lymphangiogenesis has been thought to be mediated by other members of the VPF/VEGF family, namely, VEGF-C and VEGF-D. The new “giant” lymphatics generated by VEGF-A164 were structurally and functionally abnormal: greatly enlarged with incompetent valves, sluggish flow, and delayed lymph clearance. They closely resembled the large lymphatics found in lymphangiomas/lymphatic malformations, perhaps implicating VEGF-A in the pathogenesis of these lesions. Whereas the angiogenic response was maintained only as long as VEGF-A was expressed, giant lymphatics, once formed, became VEGF-A independent and persisted indefinitely, long after VEGF-A expression ceased. These findings raise the possibility that similar, abnormal lymphatics develop in other pathologies in which VEGF-A is overexpressed, e.g., malignant tumors and chronic inflammation.


Laboratory Investigation | 2000

Heterogeneity of the angiogenic response induced in different normal adult tissues by vascular permeability factor/vascular endothelial growth factor.

Anna Pettersson; Janice A. Nagy; Lawrence F. Brown; Christian Sundberg; Ellen S. Morgan; Jungles S; Robert Carter; José Eduardo Krieger; Eleanor J. Manseau; Harvey Vs; Isabelle A. Eckelhoefer; Dian Feng; Ann M. Dvorak; Richard C. Mulligan; Harold F. Dvorak

Vascular permeability factor/vascular endothelial growth factor (VPF/VEGF) is an angiogenic cytokine with potential for the treatment of tissue ischemia. To investigate the properties of the new blood vessels induced by VPF/VEGF, we injected an adenoviral vector engineered to express murine VPF/VEGF164 into several normal tissues of adult nude mice or rats. A dose-dependent angiogenic response was induced in all tissues studied but was more intense and persisted longer (months) in skin and fat than in heart or skeletal muscle (≤3 weeks). The initial response (within 18 hours) was identical in all tissues studied and was characterized by microvascular hyperpermeability, edema, deposition of an extravascular fibrin gel, and the formation of enlarged, thin-walled pericyte-poor vessels (“mother” vessels). Mother vessels developed from preexisting microvessels after pericyte detachment and basement membrane degradation. Mother vessels were transient structures that evolved variably in different tissues into smaller daughter vessels, disorganized vessel tangles (glomeruloid bodies), and medium-sized muscular arteries and veins. Vascular structures closely resembling mother vessels and each mother vessel derivative have been observed in benign and malignant tumors, in other examples of pathological and physiological angiogenesis, and in vascular malformations. Together these data suggest that VPF/VEGF has a role in the pathogenesis of these entities. They also indicate that the angiogenic response induced by VPF/VEGF is heterogeneous and tissue specific. Finally, the muscular vessels that developed from mother vessels in skin and perimuscle fat have the structure of collaterals and could be useful clinically in the relief of tissue ischemia.


Nature Medicine | 2001

The neurotransmitter dopamine inhibits angiogenesis induced by vascular permeability factor/vascular endothelial growth factor

Sujit Basu; Janice A. Nagy; Soumitro Pal; Eliza Vasile; Isabelle A. Eckelhoefer; V. Susan Bliss; Eleanor J. Manseau; Partha Sarathi Dasgupta; Harold F. Dvorak; Debabrata Mukhopadhyay

Angiogenesis has an essential role in many important pathological and physiological settings. It has been shown that vascular permeability factor/vascular endothelial growth factor (VPF/VEGF), a potent cytokine expressed by most malignant tumors, has critical roles in vasculogenesis and both physiological and pathological angiogenesis. We report here that at non-toxic levels, the neurotransmitter dopamine strongly and selectively inhibited the vascular permeabilizing and angiogenic activities of VPF/VEGF. Dopamine acted through D2 dopamine receptors to induce endocytosis of VEGF receptor 2, which is critical for promoting angiogenesis, thereby preventing VPF/VEGF binding, receptor phosphorylation and subsequent signaling steps. The action of dopamine was specific for VPF/VEGF and did not affect other mediators of microvascular permeability or endothelial-cell proliferation or migration. These results reveal a new link between the nervous system and angiogenesis and indicate that dopamine and other D2 receptors, already in clinical use for other purposes, might have value in anti-angiogenesis therapy.


American Journal of Pathology | 2001

Glomeruloid Microvascular Proliferation Follows Adenoviral Vascular Permeability Factor/Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor-164 Gene Delivery

Christian Sundberg; Janice A. Nagy; Lawrence F. Brown; Dian Feng; Isabelle A. Eckelhoefer; Eleanor J. Manseau; Ann M. Dvorak; Harold F. Dvorak

Glomeruloid bodies are a defining histological feature of glioblastoma multiforme and some other tumors and vascular malformations. Little is known about their pathogenesis. We injected a nonreplicating adenoviral vector engineered to express vascular permeability factor/vascular endothelial growth factor-164 (VPF/VEGF(164)) into the ears of athymic mice. This vector infected local cells that strongly expressed VPF/VEGF(164) mRNA for 10 to 14 days, after which expression gradually declined. Locally expressed VPF/VEGF(164) induced an early increase in microvascular permeability, leading within 24 hours to edema and deposition of extravascular fibrin; in addition, many pre-existing microvessels enlarged to form thin-walled, pericyte-poor, mother vessels. Glomeruloid body precursors were first detected at 3 days as focal accumulations of rapidly proliferating cells in the endothelial lining of mother vessels, immediately adjacent to cells expressing VPF/VEGF(164). Initially, glomeruloid bodies were comprised of endothelial cells but subsequently pericytes and macrophages also participated. As they enlarged by endothelial cell and pericyte proliferation, glomeruloid bodies severely compromised mother vessel lumens and blood flow. Subsequently, as VPF/VEGF(164) expression declined, glomeruloid bodies devolved throughout a period of weeks by apoptosis and reorganization into normal-appearing microvessels. These results provide the first animal model for inducing glomeruloid bodies and indicate that VPF/VEGF(164) is sufficient for their induction and necessary for their maintenance.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2006

Orphan nuclear receptor TR3/Nur77 regulates VEGF-A-induced angiogenesis through its transcriptional activity.

Liuliang Qin; Dezheng Zhao; Xiaolian Tan; Eleanor J. Manseau; Mien V. Hoang; Donald R. Senger; Lawrence F. Brown; Janice A. Nagy; Harold F. Dvorak

Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF)-A has essential roles in vasculogenesis and angiogenesis, but the downstream steps and mechanisms by which human VEGF-A acts are incompletely understood. We report here that human VEGF-A exerts much of its angiogenic activity by up-regulating the expression of TR3 (mouse homologue Nur77), an immediate-early response gene and orphan nuclear receptor transcription factor previously implicated in tumor cell, lymphocyte, and neuronal growth and apoptosis. Overexpression of TR3 in human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) resulted in VEGF-A–independent proliferation, survival, and induction of several cell cycle genes, whereas expression of antisense TR3 abrogated the response to VEGF-A in these assays and also inhibited tube formation. Nur77 was highly expressed in several types of VEGF-A–dependent pathological angiogenesis in vivo. Also, using a novel endothelial cell-selective retroviral targeting system, overexpression of Nur77 DNA potently induced angiogenesis in the absence of exogenous VEGF-A, whereas Nur77 antisense strongly inhibited VEGF-A–induced angiogenesis. B16F1 melanoma growth and angiogenesis were greatly inhibited in Nur77−/− mice. Mechanistic studies with TR3/Nur77 mutants revealed that TR3/Nur77 exerted most of its effects on cultured HUVECs and its pro-angiogenic effects in vivo, through its transactivation and DNA binding domains (i.e., through transcriptional activity).


Journal of Histochemistry and Cytochemistry | 2000

Ultrastructural localization of the vascular permeability factor/vascular endothelial growth factor (VPF/VEGF) receptor-2 (FLK-1, KDR) in normal mouse kidney and in the hyperpermeable vessels induced by VPF/VEGF-expressing tumors and adenoviral vectors.

Dian Feng; Janice A. Nagy; Rolf A. Brekken; Anna Pettersson; Eleanor J. Manseau; Kathryn Pyne; Richard C. Mulligan; Philip E. Thorpe; Harold F. Dvorak; Ann M. Dvorak

Vascular permeability factor/vascular endothelial growth factor (VPF/VEGF) interacts with two high-affinity tyrosine kinase receptors, VEGFR-1 and VEGFR-2, to increase microvascular permeability and induce angiogenesis. Both receptors are selectively expressed by vascular endothelial cells and are strikingly increased in tumor vessels. We used a specific antibody to localize VEGFR-2 (FLK-1, KDR) in microvascular endothelium of normal mouse kidneys and in the microvessels induced by the TA3/St mammary tumor or by infection with an adenoviral vector engineered to express VPF/VEGF. A pre-embedding method was employed at the light and electron microscopic levels using either nanogold or peroxidase as reporters. Equivalent staining was observed on both the luminal and abluminal surfaces of tumor- and adenovirus-induced vascular endothelium, but plasma membranes at interendothelial junctions were spared except at sites connected to vesiculovacuolar organelles (VVOs). VEGFR-2 was also localized to the membranes and stomatal diaphragms of some VVOs. This staining distribution is consistent with a model in which VPF/VEGF increases microvascular permeability by opening VVOs to allow the transendothelial cell passage of plasma and plasma proteins.


Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 2009

Rapamycin Inhibition of the Akt/mTOR Pathway Blocks Select Stages of VEGF-A164–Driven Angiogenesis, in Part by Blocking S6Kinase

Qi Xue; Janice A. Nagy; Eleanor J. Manseau; Thuy L. Phung; Harold F. Dvorak; Laura E. Benjamin

Objective—We evaluated the stages of VEGF-A164 driven angiogenesis that are inhibited by therapeutic doses of rapamycin and the potential role of S6K1 in that response. Methods and Results—We assessed the effects of rapamycin on the several stages of angiogensis and lymphangiogenesis induced with an adenovirus expressing VEGF-A164 (Ad-VEGF-A164) in the ears of adult nude mice. Rapamycin (0.5 mg/kg/d) effectively inhibited mTOR and downstream S6K1 signaling and partially inhibited Akt signaling, likely through effects on TORC2. The earliest stages of angiogenesis, including mother vessel formation and increased vascular permeability, were strikingly inhibited by rapamycin, as was subsequent formation of daughter glomeruloid microvasular proliferations. However, later stage formation of vascular malformations and lymphangiogenesis were unaffected. Retrovirally delivered isoforms and shRNAs demonstrated that S6K1 signaling plays an important role in early VEGF-A164-angiogenesis. Conclusions—Rapamycin potently inhibited early and mid stages of VEGF-A164–driven angiogenesis, but not late-stage angiogenesis or lymphangiogenesis. Rapamycin decreased phosphorylation of both Akt and S6, suggesting that both the TORC1 and TORC2 pathways are impacted. Inhibition of S6K1 signaling downstream of mTOR is a major component of the antiangiogenesis action of rapamycin.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2006

Orphan nuclear receptor TR3/Nur77 regulates VEGF-A–induced angiogenesis through its transcriptional activity

Liuliang Qin; Dezheng Zhao; Xiaolian Tan; Eleanor J. Manseau; Mien V. Hoang; Donald R. Senger; Lawrence F. Brown; Janice A. Nagy; Harold F. Dvorak

Zeng et al. 2006. J. Exp. Med. doi:10.1084/jem.20051523[OpenUrl][1][Abstract/FREE Full Text][2]nn [1]: {openurl}?query=rft.jtitle%253DJ.%2BExp.%2BMed.%26rft_id%253Dinfo%253Adoi%252F10.1084%252Fjem.20051523%26rft_id%253Dinfo%253Apmid%252F16520388%26rft.genre%253Darticle%26rft_val_fmt%253Dinfo%253Aofi


Cancer Research | 1993

Expression of Vascular Permeability Factor (Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor) and Its Receptors in Adenocarcinomas of the Gastrointestinal Tract

Lawrence F. Brown; Brygida Berse; Robert W. Jackman; Kathi Tognazzi; Eleanor J. Manseau; Donald R. Senger; Harold F. Dvorak


Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 1982

Fibronectin and Fibrin Provide a Provisional Matrix for Epidermal Cell Migration During Wound Reepithelialization

Richard A.F. Clark; Lanigan Jm; Eleanor J. Manseau; Harold F. Dvorak; Robert B. Colvin

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Harold F. Dvorak

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Lawrence F. Brown

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Janice A. Nagy

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Ann M. Dvorak

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Donald R. Senger

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Kathi Tognazzi

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Dian Feng

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Christian Sundberg

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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