Normal fetal growth and placental development depend on active angiogenesis occurring at the fetomaternal interface throughout pregnancy. Nevertheless, reliable in vivo methods to assess placental angiogenesis are still missing. Here, we describe a quantitative and noninvasive in vivo method to specifically measure placental neovascularization in the gravid mouse. This method uses a technique based on the measurement of a fluorescent molecule Angiostamp700 that targets the alpha v beta 3 (αvβ3) integrin, a protein that is highly expressed by endothelial cells during the neovascularization and by trophoblast cells during invasion of the maternal decidua. Due to this noninvasive method, quantification of the fetomaternal angiogenic activity and information regarding the outcome of pregnancy are now possible.
Keywords: Angiostamp700; Fetomaternal interface; Fluorescence imaging; In vivo angiogenesis; Neovascularization; Placental development.
© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.