AI Article Synopsis

  • Endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs) play a key role in the formation of blood vessels in endometriotic lesions, and this study investigates how COX-2 signaling influences this process.
  • In a mouse model with induced endometriosis, researchers treated mice with the COX-2 inhibitor parecoxib and monitored various factors including EPC recruitment, lesion growth, vascularization, and immune cell infiltration.
  • Results showed that while circulating EPCs increased in parecoxib-treated mice, EPC recruitment to lesions decreased, leading to reduced vascularization, cell proliferation, and increased apoptosis, suggesting that COX-2 inhibition hampers blood vessel formation and lesion growth in endometriosis.

Article Abstract

The incorporation of endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs) into newly developing blood vessels contributes to the vascularization of endometriotic lesions. We analyzed whether cyclooxygenase (COX)-2 signaling regulates this vasculogenic process. Endometriotic lesions were surgically induced in irradiated FVB/N mice, which were reconstituted with bone marrow from FVB/N-TgN [Tie2/green fluorescent protein (GFP)] 287 Sato mice. The animals received β-estradiol 17-valerate once a week and were treated daily with the selective COX-2 inhibitor parecoxib (25 mg/kg) or vehicle (control) for 7 and 28 days. Analyses involved the determination of lesion growth, cyst formation, homing of GFP/Tie2 EPCs, numbers of circulating EPCs, vascularization, cell proliferation, apoptosis, and immune cell infiltration by means of high-resolution ultrasonography, caliper measurements, flow cytometry, histologic analysis, and immunohistochemical analysis. In parecoxib-treated mice, blood circulating EPCs were higher, but numbers of recruited EPCs in endometriotic lesions were significantly lower when compared with controls. This finding was associated with an impaired early vascularization and stromal tissue growth as well as reduced glandular secretory activity of the lesions. Parecoxib-treated lesions further contained less proliferating and more apoptotic cells and exhibited lower numbers of infiltrating macrophages and neutrophilic granulocytes. These findings demonstrate that the inhibition of COX-2 suppresses vasculogenesis in endometriotic lesions, which may contribute to an impaired lesion vascularization and growth.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ajpath.2017.10.013DOI Listing

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