The vascular network is closely linked to the neural system, and an interdependence is displayed in healthy and in pathophysiological
responses. How has close apposition of two such functionally different systems occurred? Here, we present a hypothesis for
the evolution of the vascular network from an ancestral neural guidance system. Biological cornerstones of this hypothesis
are the vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) protein family and cognate receptors. The primary sequences of such proteins
are conserved from invertebrates, such as worms and flies that lack discernible vascular systems compared to mammals, but
all these systems have sophisticated neuronal wiring involving such molecules. Ancestral VEGFs and receptors (VEGFRs) could
have been used to develop and maintain the nervous system in primitive eukaryotes. During evolution, the demands of increased
morphological complexity required systems for transporting molecules and cells, i.e., biological conductive tubes. We propose
that the VEGF–VEGFR axis was subverted by evolution to mediate the formation of biological tubes necessary for transport of
fluids, e.g., blood. Increasingly, there is evidence that aberrant VEGF-mediated responses are also linked to neuronal dysfunctions
ranging from motor neuron disease, stroke, Parkinson’s disease, Alzheimer’s disease, ischemic brain disease, epilepsy, multiple
sclerosis, and neuronal repair after injury, as well as common vascular diseases (e.g., retinal disease). Manipulation and
correction of the VEGF response in different neural tissues could be an effective strategy to treat different neurological
diseases.
Keywords Evolution – Endothelial – Neuronal – VEGF – Survival – Guidance – Disease – Signaling