Here, we evaluate the effects of the water extract of Ruta graveolens on vessel network formation by using a tube formation assay on a gelled basement matrix.
Angiogenesis is a phenomenon that includes different processes, such as endothelial cell proliferation, differentiation, and migration, that lead to the formation of new blood vessels and involve several signal transduction pathways. Here we show that the tube formation assay is a simple in vitro method to evaluate the impact of natural products on angiogenesis and to investigate the molecular mechanisms involved. In particular, in the presence of the water extract of Ruta graveolens (RGWE), endothelial cells are no longer able to form a cell-cell network and that the RGWE effects on human umbilical vein endothelial cell (HUVEC) tube formation is abolished by the constitutive activation of MEK.
Angiogenesis is a physiological process that leads to the formation of new blood vessels from preexisting ones and occurs during embryogenesis and organ growth. In adulthood, angiogenesis is activated only in the cycling ovary, in the placenta during pregnancy, and during wound healing and repair. Angiogenesis depends on the ability of endothelial cells to proliferate, differentiate, and migrate to form an intact vascular network1. However, in several disorders, such as inflammatory, metabolic, and rheumatic diseases, angiogenic processes are altered and angiogenesis becomes excessive. Moreover, uncontrolled angiogenic processes also stimulate tumor progression and metastasis1. For these reasons, in the last decade, research studies are focused on the development of new therapeutic strategies aimed at the inhibition of excessive angiogenesis in cancer, ocular, joint, or skin disorders2,3.
Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) represents the main target of current antiangiogenic therapies4, and several anti-VEGF monoclonal antibodies have been developed and synthesized to prevent excessive angiogenesis. However, these synthetic drugs show severe side effects and have an unfavorable cost-to-benefit ratio5,6. Therefore, it is imperative to find new therapeutic strategies to limit excessive angiogenesis with minimal side effects to complement and combine with currently used drugs. These new drugs can be found among natural products that are characterized by a high chemical diversity and biochemical specificity.
In this article, we propose a simple method to evaluate the impact of the RGWE on the ability of HUVECs to form tubules on a gelled basement matrix in vitro5. Indeed, RGWE is a mixture of secondary metabolites such as flavonoids and polyphenols among which rutin is the major component5. Many of them have been already tested as anti-inflammatory and vasoprotective agents7,8,9,10,11. Moreover, we have recently demonstrated that RGWE, but not rutin, is able to inhibit the HUVEC ability to form tubules on a gelled basement matrix and that this phenomenon is mediated by the MEK-ERK pathway, indicating RGWE as a potential therapeutic tool able to prevent excessive new blood vessel formation5.
1. RGWE Preparation
2. Cell Culture
3. Transfection
4. Tube Formation Assay
To evaluate the influence of RGWE on angiogenesis, we carried out a tube formation assay on a gelled basement matrix. When cultivated on it, HUVECs form tube-like structures that originate from cells that appear elongated and that connect each other to form a cell-cell network (Figure 2). In Figure 3, we show that the number of branches in HUVECs treated with RGWE was significantly lower as compared to the control conditions. Notably, in the presence of 0.1 mg/mL and 1 mg/mL RGWE, the number of the branches are lower by 40% and 60%, respectively, compared to the control condition. Since rutin has been indicated as the major component of RGWE5, we analyzed its effect on HUVEC tube-formation assay. As shown in Figure 4, rutin alone is not able to affect the HUVECs' ability to form a cell-cell network. Then, we used the tube formation assay to investigate the molecular mechanisms underlying the RGWE-induced inhibition of tube formation. The MEK/ERK intracellular signaling pathway exerts a pivotal role in angiogenic processes. HUVECs transfected by caMEK were treated with RGWE and cultivated on gelled basement matrix. As shown in Figure 5, in caMEK-transfected endothelial cells, RGWE no longer inhibits tube formation, while mock-transfected cells, used as control, still form a cell-cell network on the gelled basement matrix and are responsive to RGWE, thus indicating that the RGWE's effect in angiogenesis is mediated by the MEK-ERK pathway.
Figure 1: Ruta graveolens. A Ruta graveolens shrub. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 2: HUVECs form tube-like structures on a gelled basement matrix. Representative microscopic photographs of HUVECs cultured in polystyrene dish (left) and on gelled basement matrix (right). Scale bar = 10 µm.
Figure 3: RGWE inhibits tube formation in HUVECs. (A) High-power microscopic photographs of HUVECs cultured on a gelled basement matrix treated with RGWE (0, 0.01, 0.1, and 1.0 mg/mL). The scale bar is 10 µm. (B) The percentage of the HUVEC branch point (dark gray) in the presence of RGWE (0.01, 0.1, and 1.0 mg/mL) compared to untreated cells (0 mg/mL) and the trypan blue exclusion test (light gray) on HUVECs treated (0.01, 0.1, and 1 mg/mL) or not (0 mg/mL) with RGWE for 24 h. *p < 0.01 vs. the control condition (0 mg/mL). The results are expressed as the mean ± the SE of three independent experiments. The statistical significance was obtained by a two-tailed t-test.
Figure 4: Rutin does not affect HUVEC tube formation. (A) High-power microscopic photographs of HUVECs seeded on a gelled basement matrix and treated (12, 120, and 300 µg/mL) or not (0 µg/mL) with rutin for 24 h. The scale bar is 10 µm. (B) The percentage of HUVEC branch point (dark gray) in the presence of increasing doses of rutin (12, 120, and 300 µ/mL) compared to control conditions (0 µg/mL) and the trypan blue exclusion test (light gray) on HUVECs treated (12, 120, and 300 µ/mL) or not (0 µg/mL) with rutin for 24 h. The results are expressed as the mean ± the SE of three independent experiments. Statistical significance was obtained by a two-tailed t-test.
Figure 5: MEK pathway mediates RGWE effects on HUVEC tube formation. (A) High-power microscopic photographs of HUVECs transfected with empty vector (mock transfection) or with caMEK, seeded on the gelled basement matrix and treated with increasing doses of RGWE (0, 0.01, 0.1, and 1 mg/mL). The scale bar is 10 µm. (B) The percentage of the number of branch points in HUVECs mock-transfected (dark gray) and in HUVECs transfected with caMEK (light gray) and treated with increasing doses of RGWE (0.01, 0.1, and 1 mg/mL) compared to control conditions (0 mg/mL). *p < 0.01 vs. the control condition; §p < 0.05 vs. cells transfected with the empty vector and treated with the same amount of RGWE. The results are expressed as the mean ± the SE of three independent experiments. The statistical significance was obtained by a two-tailed t-test.
Natural compounds are characterized by a high chemical diversity and biochemical specificity and represent a source of potentially therapeutic molecules. Here, we show how to obtain water extract from the plant R. graveolens and propose the tube formation assay as an easy-to-perform, reliable, and quantitative method useful to investigate RGWE's effects on angiogenesis. It is important to boil the R. graveolens leaves for 1 h to be sure to obtain the complete water extract. Boiling for less than 1 h did not allow for the extraction of all the molecules, and the extract could not exert the expected biological effect.
Tube formation assay represents an in vitro test to study the molecular mechanisms underlying the several steps that lead to the formation of new blood vessels. This assay allows researchers to identify compounds able to modulate angiogenesis, as well as the proteins and signaling cascades involved. Moreover, this assay allows researchers to test substances that can influence, at the same time, endothelial cell proliferation, adhesion, migration, and protease activity, all important mechanisms in blood vessel formation. Using only this kind of test, we show that RGWE, but not its major component rutin, is able to reduce the ability of HUVECs to form tube-like structures without affecting cell viability and that this effect depends on MEK-ERK pathway activation. However, it is important to perform the test with the right number of cells. In fact, too few or too many cells could not allow the right formation of the tubes. For this reason, it is advisable to perform a preliminary test to find the correct number of cells. Moreover, the number of cell passages is as important as the cell number since, to obtain the correct tube formation assay, cells have to be passaged twice to five times. After passage 6, senescence mechanisms occur that can impair the right tube formation.
The tube formation assay is a very reproducible assay, and it sheds light on the physiology of endothelial cells, even if it is not the gold standard for the three-dimensional study of tube formation8,9,10,11. Three-dimensional collagen and fibrin models have been demonstrated to be better for investigations of vascular tubulogenesis, sprouting, and endothelial cell-pericyte interaction. However, compared to the tube formation assay on gelled basement matrix, these tests are more time- and money-consuming11, suggesting that the first could be a good test to obtain preliminary results that can be the basis for more focused in vivo studies. Finally, the tube formation assay can be carried out in 24 h, since nontransformed HUVECs are able to form tube-like structures within 6 h12,13.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
This work has been funded by Fondi di Ateneo to Luca Colucci-D'Amato and VALERE Program funds to Maria Teresa Gentile and AIRC fund IG18999 to Maurizio Bifulco.
HUVEC cells | Clontech | C2519A | |
FBS | Invitrogen | 10270106 | |
EBM-2 basal medium | Clontech | cc3156 | |
Single quot kit- supplemets and growth factors | clontech | cc4147 | |
Matrigel | Corning | 354234 | |
96-well plates | Thermo Scientific | 167008 | |
15 mL conical tubes | Sarstedt | 62,554,502 | |
10 mL disposable serological pipette | Sarstedt | 861,254,001 | |
5 mL disposable serological pipette | Sarstedt | 861,253,001 | |
1000 μL pipette | Gilson | Pipetman classic | |
100 μL pipette | Gilson | Pipetman classic | |
20 μL pipette | Gilson | Pipetman classic | |
p1000 pipette tips | Sarstedt | ||
p20-200 pipette tips | Sarstedt | 70,760,502 | |
Burker chamber | Fortuna | ||
Trypan blu stain | Gibco | 15250-061 | |
DPBS | Gibco | 14190-094 | |
mill-ex 0.22 um filters | Millipore | SLGS033SS | |
Lyophilizer | VirTis-SP Scientific | ||
Incubator | Thermo Scientific | ||
CO2 | AirCos | ||
Pen-Strep | Gibco | 15070-063 | |
100 mm dish | Sarstedt | 833,902 | |
pcDNA3 | Invitrogen | v79020 | |
Lipofectamine-2000 | Invitrogen | 11668027 | |
Opti-MEM | Gibco | 31985070 | Reduced serum medium |
Rutin | Sigma-Aldrich | R5143-50G | |
Axiovert 25 microscope | Zeiss | ||
AmScope MD500 camera | AmScope | ||
Dispase | Thermo Scientific | D4818 | |
Lab heater | Falc | ||
ParaFilm | American National Can |