The
cytokine/extracellular matrix protein osteopontin (OPN/Eta-1) is an
important component of cellular immunity and inflammation. Also, it
acts as a survival, cell-adhesive, and chemotactic factor for endothelial
cells.
Here,
subtractive suppression hybridization showed that serum-deprived murine
aortic endothelial (MAE) cells transfected with the angiogenic fibroblast
growth factor-2 (FGF2) overexpress OPN when compared to parental cells.
This was confirmed by Northern blotting and Western blot analysis of
the conditioned media in different clones of endothelial cells overexpressing
FGF2 and in endothelial cells treated with the recombinant growth factor.
In vivo, FGF2 caused OPN expression in newly-formed endothelium of the
chick embryo chorioallantoic membrane (CAM) and of murine s.c. Matrigel
plug implants.
Recombinant
OPN (rOPN), the fusion protein GST-OPN, and the deletion mutant GST-DRGD-OPN
were angiogenic in the CAM assay. Angiogenesis was triggered also by
OPN-transfected MAE cells grafted onto the CAM. OPN-driven neovascularization
was independent from endothelial avb3 integrin-engagement and was always
paralleled by the appearance of a massive mononuclear cell infiltrate.
Accordingly, rOPN, GST-OPN, GST-DRGD-OPN, and the conditioned medium
of OPN-overexpressing MAE cells were chemotactic for isolated human
monocytes. Also, rOPN triggered a proangiogenic phenotype in human monocytes
by inducing the expression of the angiogenic cytokines TNFa and IL-8.
OPN-mediated
recruitment of proangiogenic monocytes may represent a mechanism of
amplification of FGF2-induced neovascularization during inflammation,
wound healing, and tumor growth.
environments.
J.
Immunol., 171: 1085-1093 (2003)