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1 smooth muscle cell to support the developing neovessel.
2 ial or smooth muscle cells that comprise the neovessel.
3  peptide known to home specifically to tumor neovessels.
4 incorporate into a subset of sprouting tumor neovessels.
5 ast-enhanced imaging that relies on perfused neovessels.
6 pathy (OIR) with pathologic proliferation of neovessels.
7 EGF-A) levels and expansion of Tie2-positive neovessels.
8 or endothelia and by recruiting pericytes to neovessels.
9 odels, and human surgical samples of retinal neovessels.
10 d apoptosis of tumor cells surrounding these neovessels.
11 P in the single layer of cells that line the neovessels.
12 e mRNA species in nucleated cells lining the neovessels.
13 ze in the retina, particularly to pathologic neovessels.
14 F (PDGF-BB) is needed later to stabilize the neovessels.
15 al drivers of angiogenesis in murine corneal neovessels.
16 tinopathies is the formation of pathological neovessels.
17 een preformed channels and formed perfusable neovessels.
18 tiation (CD)-11b(+) macrophages and CD-31(+) neovessels.
19 y which DM induced LPA resistance of retinal neovessels.
20 ty measured as the total length of sprouting neovessels (12.63+/-3.66 mm in Ad-SM22-4A1-transduced ve
21 ributes to the assembly and remodeling of BM neovessels after myelosuppression.
22 capture microdissection (LCM) to isolate the neovessels after OIR, we found decreased expression of C
23 he complement inhibitor Cd55 specifically on neovessels, allowing for their targeted removal while le
24  noted the emergence of CD31-negative patent neovessels and a concomitant loss of tumor homing of the
25 dothelial growth factor (VEGF) expression in neovessels and by attracting vessel-associated pericytes
26 ed SMC migration and recruitment of MCs into neovessels and elucidate the molecular signaling pathway
27 cylglycerols were found in areas surrounding neovessels and lacking either form of cholesterol.
28 , heterogeneous vessel population containing neovessels and mature vessels in advanced RB disease.
29 mens to evaluate the spatial distribution of neovessels and mature vessels.
30 signaling reduces NG2(+) MC recruitment into neovessels and subsequently reduces neovessel life span.
31 H phage) that distinguished between abnormal neovessels and the normal vasculature.
32 tead, recipient-derived stromal fibroblasts, neovessels, and infiltrating leukocytes were heavily rep
33 gioarchitecture and dysfunctionality of VEGF neovessels, and they identify a rational pharmacologic s
34 dministration in vivo markedly improved VEGF neovessel architecture and reduced neovascular leak.
35 pport the maintenance and stability of tumor neovessels are not well defined.
36                                     However, neovessels are susceptible for intraplaque hemorrhage, p
37 sels, the factors that stabilize and pattern neovessels are undefined.
38 olds instead of developing into cells of the neovessel, as traditionally thought.
39 or of VEGF- and bFGF-induced CXCR4-dependent neovessel assembly in vivo and show that angiogenic effe
40         Finally, SH phage decorated abnormal neovessels at an early stage of their genesis.
41                         Interestingly, tumor neovessels become leaky after maspin treatment, whereas
42                          We demonstrate that neovessels become refractory to VEGF-A deprivation over
43 ate that angiogenic outgrowth, invasion, and neovessel branching increase with matrix cross-linking.
44              In its severest form, choroidal neovessels breach the macular Bruch's membrane, an extra
45 ed by immunohistochemistry to quantify blood neovessels (BVs) and lymphatic neovessels (LVs) to 3 wee
46    Vascular pruning, the removal of aberrant neovessels by apoptosis, is a vital step in this process
47 eases the interaction of leukemic cells with neovessels by down-regulating the expression of the adhe
48 induced regression of unstable nascent tumor neovessels by rapidly disrupting the molecular engagemen
49 ypoxia (pimonidazole), macrophages (RAM-11), neovessels (CD31), and hypoxia-inducible factor-1alpha w
50 ternative complement pathway in facilitating neovessel clearance by down-regulating the complement in
51                                     Abnormal neovessels consisted of at least three cell types that w
52                                      Intimal neovessels consistently immunostained for ET-1.
53 g studies suggest the possibility that these neovessels constitute dual-origin hybrids.
54 sions, unesterified cholesterol dominated in neovessel-containing areas enriched in glycophorin A.
55 ral macrophage density (r=0.79, P=0.007) and neovessel counts (r=0.87, P=0.001) on immunohistochemist
56 to low oxygen, mimicking a characteristic of neovessels, decreased the expression of the complement i
57                                              Neovessel density at 28 days was also reduced (23+/-42 v
58 ls decreased xenograft growth and suppressed neovessel density, suggesting a role for endogenous H2S
59                                            A neovessel-derived signal mediated by prostacyclin trigge
60    In addition to increasing the contrast of neovessels detected at baseline, alpha(v)beta(3)-GNBs al
61 e- and strain-matched control mice to assess neovessel development and regression in an oxygen-induce
62  mechanically ideal substratum for promoting neovessel development.
63               This may prevent thrombosis of neovessels during angiogenesis but renders hemophiliacs
64          An alternate proposal suggests that neovessels form from endothelial progenitors able to ass
65 use airways showed a significant decrease in neovessel formation and endothelial cell proliferation i
66   A variety of factors cooperate to regulate neovessel formation and persistence.
67 that macrophage infiltration is critical for neovessel formation and provides a strategy for predicti
68       In these diseases, the balance between neovessel formation and regression determines blindness,
69 genic growth factors in transplanted hearts, neovessel formation appears scant.
70 thway to curtail the effects of CTGF/CCN2 on neovessel formation associated with ischemic retinopathy
71       Noninvasive methods for characterizing neovessel formation during angiogenesis are currently la
72 n mediate aspects of vascular remodeling and neovessel formation during atherogenesis and other chron
73 tic mice had reduced blood flow recovery and neovessel formation in a hindlimb ischemia model compare
74 l implications for the therapy of pathologic neovessel formation in the retina of patients with PDR.
75 xpression also restores PT-ECFC capacity for neovessel formation in vivo.
76 on of PDGFRbeta(+) cell proliferation before neovessel formation is sufficient to inhibit scaffold fo
77 errantly, in the subsequent ischemia-induced neovessel formation phase of ROP.
78 rganotypic model of angiogenic sprouting and neovessel formation that originates from preformed artif
79 lial GF (VEGF) is required early to initiate neovessel formation while platelet-derived GF (PDGF-BB)
80          To identify proteinases critical to neovessel formation, an ex vivo model of angiogenesis ha
81                                 By contrast, neovessel formation, in vitro and in vivo, is dependent
82 at are characterized by aberrant increase in neovessel formation, including cancer.
83 uited to neoangiogenic niches and to support neovessel formation.
84 dothelial precursors that may participate in neovessel formation.
85 re it plays an indispensable role in driving neovessel formation.
86 ytic activity, endothelial cell invasion, or neovessel formation.
87 ts and evaluated the role of cell seeding on neovessel formation.
88 nalogous mouse models to study mechanisms of neovessel formation.
89 s of these diseases is angiogenesis (AG) and neovessel formation.
90 neutralization of IL-6 significantly reduced neovessel formation.
91 hereas they persisted in the areas that were neovessel-free.
92  of endothelial tube formation, sprouting of neovessels from murine aorta, and angiogenesis in Matrig
93 ularization, we discovered that pathological neovessels generate extraordinarily high voltage.
94 enduring vascular response, IGF-1 stabilized neovessels generated from primary endothelial cells deri
95                                 Pathological neovessels growing into the normally avascular photorece
96 ovel therapeutic strategy by both suppressed neovessel growth and curtailing fibrosis typically assoc
97 termines blindness, making the modulation of neovessel growth highly desirable.
98                                              Neovessel growth, density, and length were graded at int
99 hich recapitulates ischemia-induced aberrant neovessel growth, is characterized by increased expressi
100 at intervals using a semiquantitative visual neovessel growth-rating scheme (angiogenic index, 0-16 s
101 ured in an environment that does not lead to neovessel growth.
102 apid regression of specific subsets of tumor neovessels has opened up new avenues of research to iden
103                                          The neovessels in alpha(M)(-/-) mice were leaky and immature
104 y immunohistochemistry to the endothelium of neovessels in rat tissues undergoing angiogenesis during
105 e secreted angiostatin specifically targeted neovessels in the brain tumors, as evidenced by the dimi
106 quently occurred around thin-walled, dilated neovessels in the infarct border zone and was accompanie
107 poietin-1, a cytokine that "normalizes" VEGF neovessels in vivo, activated Rac1 and improved cord for
108 ic growth factors in the formation of mature neovessels in vivo.
109 s, and its level of expression is reduced in neovessels in vivo.
110 of excess opticin inhibited the formation of neovessels in wild-type mice.
111 ctively induces regression of unstable tumor neovessels, in part through disruption of VE-cadherin si
112     Our data suggest that sensory nerves and neovessels inhibit each other in the cornea.
113 al cell migration in vitro and the growth of neovessels into subcutaneous implants of Matrigel in viv
114 )) scaffold is formed before infiltration of neovessels into this scaffold to form CNV lesions, and t
115 atment resulted in significant regression of neovessel invasion area (P < 0.05).
116 luding neovascular area, vessel caliber, and neovessel invasion area.
117                      Abnormal development of neovessels is associated with early expression of distin
118          Moreover, timely regeneration of BM neovessels is essential for reconstitution of hematopoie
119   While DM had no effect on the formation of neovessels, it prevented LPA-induced regression.
120 ent into neovessels and subsequently reduces neovessel life span.
121 ral corneal epithelium, leakiness of corneal neovessels, loss of axons in corneal stroma, and loss of
122 uantify blood neovessels (BVs) and lymphatic neovessels (LVs) to 3 weeks after implantation.
123 ay also impair TGFbeta signaling and hypoxic neovessel maturation.
124 ecruitment and smooth muscle coverage in the neovessels of the border zone of infarcted myocardium ar
125 e detected donor-derived CEPs throughout the neovessels of tumors and Matrigel-plugs in an Id1+/-Id3-
126 uiescent and unable to spontaneously produce neovessels, only VEGF was capable of inducing an angioge
127 , 5 and 2 cases), 5 scaffolds showed intimal neovessels or marked peristrut low-intensity areas.
128 igration, basement membrane degradation, and neovessel organization.
129 sion of CTGF/CCN2 harnessed ischemia-induced neovessel outgrowth in oxygen-induced retinopathy mice.
130 d to express CCN1 harnessed ischemia-induced neovessel outgrowth without adversely affecting the phys
131 glioma development and the quantification of neovessels over time.
132  a nonsignificant decrease in the density of neovessels (P = 0.94).
133 mounts and identified an increased number of neovessels, peaking at postnatal day 17 (P17; P=0.001).
134   Endogenous VEGF signalling prevents excess neovessel pericyte coverage, and is required for VSMC re
135 ever, VEGF induced the formation of immature neovessels, providing an explanation for its lesser effi
136 so involved in recruitment of mural cells by neovessels, regulating maturation of the infarct vascula
137     As expected, the recognition of abnormal neovessels relied on the unique peptide insert of SH pha
138 a few millimeters without the recruitment of neovessels since cancer cells require access to blood ve
139  this end, we used an ex vivo assay in which neovessels sprouted from retinal explants (isolated from
140                Furthermore, Slit3 stimulates neovessel sprouting ex vivo and new blood vessel growth
141 and Akt, but not p38 MAPK, are necessary for neovessel sprouting.
142 , but significantly potentiated VEGF-induced neovessel sprouting.
143 trix-degrading proteases as well as immature neovessels sprouting into the lesion.
144 ol of lumen and tube formation and, finally, neovessel stability and maturation.
145 tomes not only induce AG/WH but also promote neovessel stabilization and endothelial cell survival fo
146 liferating bile ductules and its presence on neovessels suggests that Notch signaling may be importan
147 HCMV secretome to preformed vessels extended neovessel survival, but this effect was blocked by neutr
148 le gene delivery of VEGF results in immature neovessels that ultimately regress.
149 wn about the factors that drive sprouting of neovessels, the factors that stabilize and pattern neove
150 on or from pericytes that are present in the neovessels themselves.
151  mAbs to VE-cadherin by blocking assembly of neovessels, thereby inhibiting tumor growth.
152 us (DM) influences responsiveness of retinal neovessels to lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) and to elucida
153 were to evaluate the spatial distribution of neovessels versus mature vessels in both human retinobla
154 ings suggest TEVGs transform into functional neovessels via an inflammatory process of vascular remod
155              As a consequence, the resulting neovessel was entirely of host cell origin.
156          Integrity of suture-induced corneal neovessels was assessed with high molecular weight dextr
157               In human RB, the percentage of neovessels was higher in the periphery of the tumor than
158              The percentage of large-caliber neovessels was higher in the periphery than in the cente
159 atients, and the presence of macrophages and neovessels was quantified by immunohistochemistry.
160 ntiate into the mature vascular cells of the neovessel, we implanted an immunodeficient mouse recipie
161 Immunohistochemical analysis showed that the neovessels were composed of human and mouse endothelial
162                                  Intraplaque neovessels were found predominantly in macrophage-rich h
163 distribution of large-caliber vessels (i.e., neovessels were higher in the periphery for large [P = 0
164 ively), whereas CE grade and the presence of neovessels were not.
165  Indeed, IGF-1 lost its ability to stabilize neovessels when the Erk pathway was inhibited pharmacolo
166        In contrast to VEGF, IGF-1 stabilizes neovessels, which is dependent on Erk activity and assoc
167 ited the expression of S1P(1) polypeptide on neovessels while concomitantly suppressing vascular stab
168 embly and induce regression of nascent tumor neovessels, with minimal toxicity and without affecting
169  colocalization of asTF with macrophages and neovessels within complicated, but not uncomplicated, hu
170                              There were many neovessels within the intima of CAV lesions.
171                                              Neovessels within the matrigel stained positive for alph
172                       The presence of patent neovessels within vascular occlusions in chronic thrombo

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