A significant barrier to the success of engineered tissues is the inadequate transport of nutrients and gases to, and waste away from, cells within the constructs, after implantation. Generation of microtubular networks by endothelial cells in engineered constructs to mimic the in vivo transport scheme is essential for facilitating tissue survival by promoting the in vitro formation of microvessels that integrate with host microvasculature, after implantation. Previously, we reported that select pressures stimulate endothelial proliferation involving protubulogenic molecules such as fibroblast growth factor-2 (FGF-2) and vascular endothelial growth factor-C (VEGF-C). Based on this, we investigated fluid pressure as a selective modulator of early tubulogenic activity with the intent of assessing the potential utility of this mechanical stimulus as a tissue-engineering control parameter. For this purpose, we used a custom pressure system to expose two-dimensional (2D) and three-dimensional (3D) cultures of endothelial cells to static pressures of 0 (controls), 20, or 40 mmHg for 3 days. Compared to controls, 2D endothelial cultures exposed to 20, but not 40 mmHg, exhibited significantly (p<0.05) enhanced cell growth that depended on VEGF receptor-3 (VEGFR-3), a receptor for VEGF-C. Moreover, endothelial cells grown on microbeads and suspended in 3D collagen gels under 20 mmHg, but not 40 mmHg, displayed significantly (p<0.05) increased sprout formation. Interestingly, pressure-dependent proliferation and sprout formation occurred in parallel with pressure-sensitive upregulation of VEGF-C and VEGFR-3 expression and were sensitive to local FGF-2 levels. Collectively, the results of the present study provided evidence that early endothelial-related tubulogenic activity depends on local hydrostatic pressure levels in the context of local growth factor conditions. In addition to relevance to microvascular diseases associated with interstitial hypertension (e.g., cancer and glaucoma), these findings provided first insight into the potential utility of hydrostatic pressure as a fine-tune control parameter to optimize microvascularization of tissue-engineering constructs in the in vitro setting before their implantation.

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