Regulation of blood and lymphatic vessel development
The goal of my laboratory is to understand how blood vessels grow, differentiate and regress through studying the transcriptional regulation of vascular genes.
The vascular system is a highly branched network of endothelial cell-lined tubes that transports blood, metabolites and waste products throughout the body. In addition to being essential for embryonic development, the formation of new blood vessels is required after injury, during tissue regrowth and repair, and for the growth and spread of solid tumours. However, our ability to manipulate vessel growth for therapeutic aims is hampered by a poor understanding of the mechanisms regulating vessel growth in both physiological and pathological contexts.
To study vessel regulation, my laboratory primarily focuses on the identification, characterisation and delineation of enhancers (cis-regulatory elements) directing gene expression within the vasculature. Enhancers are densely clustered groups of transcription factor binding motifs and are the principal regulators of spatio-temporal patterns of gene transcription. Analysis of the proteins that activate and repress different enhancers is combined with genetic studies to accurately position these factors within complex signalling networks. We are using this approach to understand what makes blood vessels molecularly different from each other, to determine the signalling cascades involved at different stages of vessel growth, and to study these processes in different disease states, and during repair after injury (e.g. after a heart attack).
This work involves a variety of model systems including transgenic mouse and zebrafish, tissue culture and in silico analysis.
Latest publications
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Transcription Factors Regulating Vasculogenesis and Angiogenesis.
Journal article
Payne S. et al, (2023), Dev Dyn
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Corrigendum: MEF2 transcription factors are key regulators of sprouting angiogenesis
Journal article
Sacilotto N. et al, (2022), Genes & development, 36
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JAG1-NOTCH4 mechanosensing drives atherosclerosis.
Journal article
Souilhol C. et al, (2022), Sci Adv, 8
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Tissue-Specific Roles for the Slit-Robo Pathway During Heart, Caval Vein, and Diaphragm Development.
Journal article
Zhao J. et al, (2022), J Am Heart Assoc, 11
What's new
BHF Fellowship renewal for Sarah De Val paves the way to novel strategies for inducing and improving arterial growth
5 June 2023
Congratulations are in order for Associate Professor Sarah De Val, who has been awarded a renewal of her British Heart Foundation Senior Basic Science Research Fellowship. The award recognises her pioneering research on coronary vessel formation and differentiation.
BHF funded DPAG projects to receive share of £2 million raised by the London Marathon
5 October 2022
The British Heart Foundation were charity of the year for the 2022 TCS London Marathon. Around 800 BHF London Marathon runners, including former De Val lab researcher Dr Alice Preston, have raised nearly £2 million, and rising, for BHF-funded science that could lead to improved new treatments for heart failure. Research led by Associate Professor Sarah De Val and Dr Joaquim Vieira are two of eight projects to receive funding from these proceeds.
DPAG researchers to take on the London to Brighton Bike Ride for the British Heart Foundation
24 May 2022
Associate Professor Sarah De Val will lead a team of researchers as they take on the British Heart Foundation’s (BHF) London to Brighton Bike Ride.
Collaborations & Funding
Collaborators
Prof Nicola Smart (Department of Physiology, Anatomy and Genetics, Oxford): Vessel formation in the injured heart.
Dr Gillian Douglas (Ratcliffe Department of Medicine, Oxford): Regulatory pathways active in cardiovascular pathologies.
Prof Adrian Harris (Department of Oncology): Transcriptional networks active during different modes of tumour angiogenesis.
Prof Ralf Adams, Prof Mukesh Jain, Prof Mark Kahn, Prof Martin Schwartz and Prof Michael Potente (Leducq Transatlantic network): The Transcription Factor KLF2 and Cardiovascular Disease
Current Funders
British Heart Foundation (Personal Senior Fellowship; Project Grant; DPhil Studentships)
Medical Research Council (Project Grant)
Leducq Fondation (Transatlantic Network of Excellence)
John Fell Fund (Pilot Grant)
BHF Oxford Centre of Excellence (Pilot Grants)
Join the De Val Lab
PhD students
My lab is always keen to recruit talented students. I accept DPhil students through both the Departmental scheme and through the British Heart Foundation 4-year DPhil scheme.
Postdoctoral Scientists
Current vacancies for postdoctoral scientists can be found on the Oxford University and DPAG Vacancies web pages. Alternatively, I am always happy to discuss opportunities for suitable applicants to secure fellowship funding.
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