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Dive into the research topics where Emma Gordon is active.

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Featured researches published by Emma Gordon.


Developmental Cell | 2012

ALK1 Signaling Inhibits Angiogenesis by Cooperating with the Notch Pathway

Bruno Larrivée; Claudia Prahst; Emma Gordon; Raquel del Toro; Thomas Mathivet; Antonio Duarte; Michael Simons; Anne Eichmann

Activin receptor-like kinase 1 (ALK1) is an endothelial-specific member of the TGF-β/BMP receptor family that is inactivated in patients with hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia (HHT). How ALK1 signaling regulates angiogenesis remains incompletely understood. Here we show that ALK1 inhibits angiogenesis by cooperating with the Notch pathway. Blocking Alk1 signaling during postnatal development in mice leads to retinal hypervascularization and the appearance of arteriovenous malformations (AVMs). Combined blockade of Alk1 and Notch signaling further exacerbates hypervascularization, whereas activation of Alk1 by its high-affinity ligand BMP9 rescues hypersprouting induced by Notch inhibition. Mechanistically, ALK1-dependent SMAD signaling synergizes with activated Notch in stalk cells to induce expression of the Notch targets HEY1 and HEY2, thereby repressing VEGF signaling, tip cell formation, and endothelial sprouting. Taken together, these results uncover a direct link between ALK1 and Notch signaling during vascular morphogenesis that may be relevant to the pathogenesis of HHT vascular lesions.


Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology | 2016

Mechanisms and regulation of endothelial VEGF receptor signalling

Michael Simons; Emma Gordon; Lena Claesson-Welsh

Vascular endothelial growth factors (VEGFs) and their receptors (VEGFRs) are uniquely required to balance the formation of new blood vessels with the maintenance and remodelling of existing ones, during development and in adult tissues. Recent advances have greatly expanded our understanding of the tight and multi-level regulation of VEGFR2 signalling, which is the primary focus of this Review. Important insights have been gained into the regulatory roles of VEGFR-interacting proteins (such as neuropilins, proteoglycans, integrins and protein tyrosine phosphatases); the dynamics of VEGFR2 endocytosis, trafficking and signalling; and the crosstalk between VEGF-induced signalling and other endothelial signalling cascades. A clear understanding of this multifaceted signalling web is key to successful therapeutic suppression or stimulation of vascular growth.


Development | 2010

Macrophages define dermal lymphatic vessel calibre during development by regulating lymphatic endothelial cell proliferation

Emma Gordon; Sujata Rao; Jeffrey W. Pollard; Stephen L. Nutt; Richard A. Lang; Natasha L. Harvey

Macrophages have been suggested to stimulate neo-lymphangiogenesis in settings of inflammation via two potential mechanisms: (1) acting as a source of lymphatic endothelial progenitor cells via the ability to transdifferentiate into lymphatic endothelial cells and be incorporated into growing lymphatic vessels; and (2) providing a crucial source of pro-lymphangiogenic growth factors and proteases. We set out to establish whether cells of the myeloid lineage are important for development of the lymphatic vasculature through either of these mechanisms. Here, we provide lineage tracing evidence to demonstrate that lymphatic endothelial cells arise independently of the myeloid lineage during both embryogenesis and tumour-stimulated lymphangiogenesis in the mouse, thus excluding macrophages as a source of lymphatic endothelial progenitor cells in these settings. In addition, we demonstrate that the dermal lymphatic vasculature of PU.1–/– and Csf1r–/– macrophage-deficient mouse embryos is hyperplastic owing to elevated lymphatic endothelial cell proliferation, suggesting that cells of the myeloid lineage provide signals that act to restrain lymphatic vessel calibre in the skin during development. In contrast to what has been demonstrated in settings of inflammation, macrophages do not comprise the principal source of pro-lymphangiogenic growth factors, including VEGFC and VEGFD, in the embryonic dermal microenvironment, illustrating that the sources of patterning and proliferative signals driving embryonic and disease-stimulated lymphangiogenesis are likely to be distinct.


Developmental Dynamics | 2008

Expression of the hyaluronan receptor LYVE-1 is not restricted to the lymphatic vasculature; LYVE-1 is also expressed on embryonic blood vessels

Emma Gordon; Nicholas W. Gale; Natasha L. Harvey

Expression of the hyaluronan receptor LYVE‐1 is one of few available criteria used to discriminate lymphatic vessels from blood vessels. Until now, endothelial LYVE‐1 expression was reported to be restricted to lymphatic vessels and to lymph node, liver, and spleen sinuses. Here, we provide the first evidence that LYVE‐1 is expressed on blood vessels of the yolk sac during mouse embryogenesis. LYVE‐1 is ubiquitously expressed in the yolk sac capillary plexus at E9.5, then becomes progressively down‐regulated on arterial endothelium during vascular remodelling. LYVE‐1 is also expressed on intra‐embryonic arterial and venous endothelium at early embryonic stages and on endothelial cells of the lung and endocardium throughout embryogenesis. These findings have important implications for the use of LYVE‐1 as a specific marker of the lymphatic vasculature during embryogenesis and neo‐lymphangiogenesis. Our data are also the first demonstration, to our knowledge, that the mouse yolk sac is devoid of lymphatic vessels. Developmental Dynamics 237:1901–1909, 2008.


Nature Communications | 2015

Alk1 and Alk5 inhibition by Nrp1 controls vascular sprouting downstream of Notch.

Irene M. Aspalter; Emma Gordon; Alexandre Dubrac; Anan Ragab; Jarek Narloch; Pedro Vizán; Ilse Geudens; Russell T. Collins; Claudio A. Franco; Cristina Abrahams; Gavin Thurston; Marcus Fruttiger; Ian Rosewell; Anne Eichmann; Holger Gerhardt

Sprouting angiogenesis drives blood vessel growth in healthy and diseased tissues. Vegf and Dll4/Notch signalling cooperate in a negative feedback loop that specifies endothelial tip and stalk cells to ensure adequate vessel branching and function. Current concepts posit that endothelial cells default to the tip-cell phenotype when Notch is inactive. Here we identify instead that the stalk-cell phenotype needs to be actively repressed to allow tip-cell formation. We show this is a key endothelial function of neuropilin-1 (Nrp1), which suppresses the stalk-cell phenotype by limiting Smad2/3 activation through Alk1 and Alk5. Notch downregulates Nrp1, thus relieving the inhibition of Alk1 and Alk5, thereby driving stalk-cell behaviour. Conceptually, our work shows that the heterogeneity between neighbouring endothelial cells established by the lateral feedback loop of Dll4/Notch utilizes Nrp1 levels as the pivot, which in turn establishes differential responsiveness to TGF-β/BMP signalling.


Vascular Cell | 2012

Deciphering the roles of macrophages in developmental and inflammation stimulated lymphangiogenesis

Natasha L. Harvey; Emma Gordon

Lymphatic vessels share an intimate relationship with hematopoietic cells that commences during embryogenesis and continues throughout life. Lymphatic vessels provide a key conduit for immune cell trafficking during immune surveillance and immune responses and in turn, signals produced by immune lineage cells in settings of inflammation regulate lymphatic vessel growth and activity. In the majority of cases, the recruitment and activation of immune cells during inflammation promotes the growth and development of lymphatic vessels (lymphangiogenesis) and enhances lymph flow, effects that amplify cell trafficking to local lymph nodes and facilitate the mounting of effective immune responses. Macrophages comprise a major, heterogeneous lineage of immune cells that, in addition to key roles in innate and adaptive immunity, perform diverse tasks important for tissue development, homeostasis and repair. Here, we highlight the emerging roles of macrophages in lymphangiogenesis, both during development and in settings of pathology. While much attention has focused on the production of pro-lymphangiogenic stimuli including VEGF-C and VEGF-D by macrophages in models of inflammation including cancer, there is ample evidence to suggest that macrophages provide additional signals important for the regulation of lymphatic vascular growth, morphogenesis and function.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2014

Netrin-1 controls sympathetic arterial innervation

Isabelle Brunet; Emma Gordon; Jinah Han; Brunella Cristofaro; Dong Broqueres-You; Chun Liu; Karine Bouvrée; Jiasheng Zhang; Raquel del Toro; Thomas Mathivet; Bruno Larrivée; Julia Jagu; Laurence Pibouin-Fragner; Luc Pardanaud; Maria J.C. Machado; Timothy E. Kennedy; Zhen Zhuang; Michael Simons; Bernard I. Levy; Marc Tessier-Lavigne; Almut Grenz; Holger K. Eltzschig; Anne Eichmann

Autonomic sympathetic nerves innervate peripheral resistance arteries, thereby regulating vascular tone and controlling blood supply to organs. Despite the fundamental importance of blood flow control, how sympathetic arterial innervation develops remains largely unknown. Here, we identified the axon guidance cue netrin-1 as an essential factor required for development of arterial innervation in mice. Netrin-1 was produced by arterial smooth muscle cells (SMCs) at the onset of innervation, and arterial innervation required the interaction of netrin-1 with its receptor, deleted in colorectal cancer (DCC), on sympathetic growth cones. Function-blocking approaches, including cell type-specific deletion of the genes encoding Ntn1 in SMCs and Dcc in sympathetic neurons, led to severe and selective reduction of sympathetic innervation and to defective vasoconstriction in resistance arteries. These findings indicate that netrin-1 and DCC are critical for the control of arterial innervation and blood flow regulation in peripheral organs.


Nature Communications | 2016

VEGFR2 pY949 signalling regulates adherens junction integrity and metastatic spread

Xiujuan Li; Narendra Padhan; Elisabet O. Sjöström; Francis P. Roche; Chiara Testini; Naoki Honkura; Miguel Sáinz-Jaspeado; Emma Gordon; Katie Bentley; Andrew Philippides; Vladimir Tolmachev; Elisabetta Dejana; Radu V. Stan; Dietmar Vestweber; Kurt Ballmer-Hofer; Christer Betsholtz; Kristian Pietras; Leif Jansson; Lena Claesson-Welsh

The specific role of VEGFA-induced permeability and vascular leakage in physiology and pathology has remained unclear. Here we show that VEGFA-induced vascular leakage depends on signalling initiated via the VEGFR2 phosphosite Y949, regulating dynamic c-Src and VE-cadherin phosphorylation. Abolished Y949 signalling in the mouse mutant Vegfr2Y949F/Y949F leads to VEGFA-resistant endothelial adherens junctions and a block in molecular extravasation. Vessels in Vegfr2Y949F/Y949F mice remain sensitive to inflammatory cytokines, and vascular morphology, blood pressure and flow parameters are normal. Tumour-bearing Vegfr2Y949F/Y949F mice display reduced vascular leakage and oedema, improved response to chemotherapy and, importantly, reduced metastatic spread. The inflammatory infiltration in the tumour micro-environment is unaffected. Blocking VEGFA-induced disassembly of endothelial junctions, thereby suppressing tumour oedema and metastatic spread, may be preferable to full vascular suppression in the treatment of certain cancer forms.


Science Signaling | 2016

The endothelial adaptor molecule TSAd is required for VEGF-induced angiogenic sprouting through junctional c-Src activation

Emma Gordon; Daisuke Fukuhara; Simone Weström; Narendra Padhan; Elisabet O. Sjöström; Laurens A. van Meeteren; Liqun He; Fabrizio Orsenigo; Elisabetta Dejana; Katie Bentley; Anne Spurkland; Lena Claesson-Welsh

The adaptor protein TSAd helps endothelial cells disconnect so that they can migrate and form new blood vessels. Disconnecting endothelial cells for new blood vessels The endothelial cells lining blood vessels are linked together by adherens junctions, where VE-cadherin protein complexes must come apart so that endothelial cells can migrate and proliferate to form new blood vessels. This process is triggered by activation of the receptor VEGFR2, which stimulates the kinase c-Src. Gordon et al. showed that the adaptor protein TSAd linked these two signaling molecules in the developing trachea. TSAd recruited active c-Src to adherens junctions, which resulted in the breakdown of VE-cadherin complexes and enabled the rearrangement of endothelial cells to form a new blood vessel sprout. Because TSAd was required for blood vessel formation in developing trachea, but not in the developing retina, TSAd could be targeted to prevent abnormal vascular growth in a tissue-specific manner. Activation of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) receptor 2 (VEGFR2) by VEGF binding is critical for vascular morphogenesis. In addition, VEGF disrupts the endothelial barrier by triggering the phosphorylation and turnover of the junctional molecule VE-cadherin, a process mediated by the VEGFR2 downstream effectors T cell–specific adaptor (TSAd) and the tyrosine kinase c-Src. We investigated whether the VEGFR2-TSAd–c-Src pathway was required for angiogenic sprouting. Indeed, Tsad-deficient embryoid bodies failed to sprout in response to VEGF. Tsad-deficient mice displayed impaired angiogenesis specifically during tracheal vessel development, but not during retinal vasculogenesis, and in VEGF-loaded Matrigel plugs, but not in those loaded with FGF. The SH2 and proline-rich domains of TSAd bridged VEGFR2 and c-Src, and this bridging was critical for the localization of activated c-Src to endothelial junctions and elongation of the growing sprout, but not for selection of the tip cell. These results revealed that vascular sprouting and permeability are both controlled through the VEGFR2-TSAd–c-Src signaling pathway in a subset of tissues, which may be useful in developing strategies to control tissue-specific pathological angiogenesis.


Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences | 2016

Novel affinity binders for neutralization of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) signaling

Filippa Fleetwood; Rezan Güler; Emma Gordon; Stefan Ståhl; Lena Claesson-Welsh; John Löfblom

Angiogenesis denotes the formation of new blood vessels from pre-existing vasculature. Progression of diseases such as cancer and several ophthalmological disorders may be promoted by excess angiogenesis. Novel therapeutics to inhibit angiogenesis and diagnostic tools for monitoring angiogenesis during therapy, hold great potential for improving treatment of such diseases. We have previously generated so-called biparatopic Affibody constructs with high affinity for the vascular endothelial growth factor receptor-2 (VEGFR2), which recognize two non-overlapping epitopes in the ligand-binding site on the receptor. Affibody molecules have previously been demonstrated suitable for imaging purposes. Their small size also makes them attractive for applications where an alternative route of administration is beneficial, such as topical delivery using eye drops. In this study, we show that decreasing linker length between the two Affibody domains resulted in even slower dissociation from the receptor. The new variants of the biparatopic Affibody bound to VEGFR2-expressing cells, blocked VEGFA binding, and inhibited VEGFA-induced signaling of VEGFR2 over expressing cells. Moreover, the biparatopic Affibody inhibited sprout formation of endothelial cells in an in vitro angiogenesis assay with similar potency as the bivalent monoclonal antibody ramucirumab. This study demonstrates that the biparatopic Affibody constructs show promise for future therapeutic as well as in vivo imaging applications.

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Natasha L. Harvey

University of South Australia

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Anne Eichmann

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Richard A. Lang

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Sujata Rao

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Bahar Kasaai

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Hanna M. Peacock

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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