scholarly journals Piezo Type Mechanosensitive Ion Channel Component 1 is Required for Heart Development in Zebrafish

Author(s):  
Yufeng Liu ◽  
Zhiyu Fang ◽  
Yibo Chen ◽  
Siyuan Zou ◽  
Jize Sui ◽  
...  

Abstract PIEZO1 is a non-selective cation channel protein that converts mechanical stimuli into electrochemical signals through mechanical force transmission. In recent years, more and more attention has been paid to its relationship with cardiovascular development and related diseases. However, PIEZO1 is difficult to be used as a therapeutic target due to incomplete study of its related phenotype and mechanism. Starting with the phenotypes of zebrafish at different stages of development, piezo1 knockout zebrafish features decreased heart rate in embryonic stage, increased heart size in 72dpf larvae, as well as ventricular enlargement, passivation and increased immune infiltration in adult stage. Further characterization revealed the relationship between PIEZO1 and AcanA protein at embryonic stage, and hand2 protein at adult stage. Through further RNA-seq analysis, ptpn21 downregulation, shox2 upregulation, itga4 upregulation were used to explain ventricular enlargement, heart rate decrease and immune infiltration increase respectively. Overall, this study provides a theoretical basis for elucidating the mechanism of PIEZO1 in regulating cardiac development.

2013 ◽  
Vol 113 (suppl_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarah E Wetzel-Strong ◽  
Manyu Li ◽  
Toshio Nishikimi ◽  
Kathleen M Caron

The multi-functional peptide adrenomedullin ( Adm = gene, AM = protein) plays important roles in embryonic development and disease. Previous studies demonstrated that Adm knockout mice die at embryonic day 13.5 with small, disorganized hearts and hypoplastic lymphatic vessels, highlighting the importance of this peptide in normal cardiovascular development. Since Adm knockout animals are embryonic lethal, our goal was to generate and characterize a novel model of Adm over-expression to study the role of Adm during development and disease processes. Through gene targeting techniques, we generated a novel mouse model of Adm over-expression, abbreviated as Adm hi/hi . When we assessed gene expression of Adm from 10 different tissues, we found Adm hi/hi mice express 3- to 15-fold more Adm than wildtype littermates. Additionally, peptide levels of AM in lung and kidney, as well as circulating plasma levels of AM were elevated 3-fold over wildtype mice, indicating a functional increase in AM. Our initial analysis revealed that adult Adm hi/hi mice have larger heart weight to body weight ratios than wildtype littermates (4.93±0.23 vs. 5.96±0.29, n = 11-12). We found that compared to wildtype, Adm hi/hi embryos have more proliferating cells during heart development (14.46±1.11 vs. 31.97±2.84, n=4), indicating that hyperplasia drives Adm hi/hi heart enlargement. By crossing the Adm hi/hi line to different tissue-specific Cre lines, we were able to excise the stabilizing bovine growth hormone 3’UTR, thereby returning Adm expression levels back to wildtype in cells with active Cre recombinase. Using this approach, we identified the epicardium as a major source of AM during cardiac development. In conclusion, we found that AM derived primarily from the epicardium drives cardiac hyperplasia during embryonic development resulting in persistent, enlarged hearts of adult Adm hi/hi mice. Since our Adm hi/hi mice recapitulate the 3-fold plasma elevation of AM observed during human disease, this mouse line will be a useful tool for studying the role of elevated AM during disease.


2018 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. 19 ◽  
Author(s):  
Olubusola Shifatu ◽  
Sarah Glasshagel-Chilson ◽  
Hannah Nelson ◽  
Purva Patel ◽  
Wendy Tomamichel ◽  
...  

Giant danios (genus Devario), like zebrafish, are teleosts belonging to the danioninae subfamily of cyprinids. Adult giant danios are used in a variety of investigations aimed at understanding cellular and physiological processes, including heart regeneration. Despite their importance, little is known about development and growth in giant danios, or their cardiac and coronary vessels development. To address this scarcity of knowledge, we performed a systematic study of a giant danio (Devario malabaricus), focusing on its cardiac development, from the segmentation period to ten months post-fertilization. Using light and scanning electron microscopy, we documented that its cardiovascular development and maturation proceed along well defined dynamic and conserved morphogenic patterns. The overall size and cardiovascular expansion of this species was significantly impacted by environmental parameters such as rearing densities. The coronary vasculature began to emerge in the late larval stage. More importantly, we documented two possible loci of initiation of the coronary vasculature in this species, and compared the emergence of the coronaries to that of zebrafish and gourami. This is the first comprehensive study of the cardiac growth in a Devario species, and our findings serve as an important reference for further investigations of cardiac biology using this species.


Biology ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 28
Author(s):  
Xuhui Han ◽  
Bingqi Wang ◽  
Dongxu Jin ◽  
Kuang Liu ◽  
Hongjie Wang ◽  
...  

Folic acid, one of the 13 essential vitamins, plays an important role in cardiovascular development. Mutations in folic acid synthesis gene 5,10-methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHFR) is associated with the occurrence of congenital heart disease. However, the mechanisms underlying the regulation of cardiac development by mthfr gene are poorly understood. Here, we exposed zebrafish embryos to excessive folate or folate metabolism inhibitors. Moreover, we established a knock-out mutant of mthfr gene in zebrafish by using CRISPR/Cas9. The zebrafish embryos of insufficient or excessive folic acid and mthfr−/− mutant all gave rise to early pericardial edema and cardiac defect at 3 days post fertilization (dpf). Furthermore, the folic acid treated embryos showed abnormal movement at 5 dpf. The expression levels of cardiac marker genes hand2, gata4, and nppa changed in the abnormality of folate metabolism embryos and mthfr−/− mutant, and there is evidence that they are related to the change of methylation level caused by the change of folate metabolism. In conclusion, our study provides a novel model for the in-depth study of MTHFR gene and folate metabolism. Furthermore, our results reveal that folic acid has a dose-dependent effect on early cardiac development. Precise dosage of folic acid supplementation is crucial for the embryonic development of organisms.


2005 ◽  
Vol 25 (11) ◽  
pp. 4693-4702 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kazunobu Tachibana ◽  
Nina Jones ◽  
Daniel J. Dumont ◽  
Mira C. Puri ◽  
Alan Bernstein

ABSTRACT The development of the cardiovascular system and the development of the early hematopoietic systems are closely related, and both require signaling through the Tie2 receptor tyrosine kinase. Although endothelial cells and hematopoietic cells as well as their precursors share common gene expression patterns during development, it remains completely unknown how Tie2 signaling coordinately regulates cardiovascular development and early hematopoiesis in vivo. We show here that mice with a targeted mutation in tyrosine residue 1100 in the carboxyl-terminal tail of Tie2 display defective cardiac development and impaired hematopoietic and endothelial cell development in the paraaortic splanchnopleural mesoderm similar to that seen in Tie2-null mutant mice. Surprisingly, however, unlike Tie2-null mutant mice, mice deficient in signaling through this tyrosine residue show a normal association of perivascular cells with nascent blood vessels. These studies are the first to demonstrate the physiological importance of a single tyrosine residue in Tie2, and they suggest that multiple tyrosine residues in the receptor may coordinate cardiovascular development and early hematopoietic development.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Amanda H. Mahnke ◽  
Georgios D. Sideridis ◽  
Nihal A. Salem ◽  
Alexander M. Tseng ◽  
R. Colin Carter ◽  
...  

AbstractPrenatal alcohol exposure (PAE) can result in cognitive and behavioral disabilities and growth deficits. Because alcohol-related neurobehavioral deficits may occur in the absence of overt dysmorphic features or growth deficits, there is a need to identify biomarkers of PAE that can predict neurobehavioral impairment. In this study, we assessed infant plasma extracellular, circulating miRNAs (exmiRNAs) obtained from a heavily exposed Cape Town cohort to determine whether these can be used to predict PAE-related growth restriction and cognitive impairment. PAE, controlling for smoking as a covariate, altered 27% of expressed exmiRNAs with clinically-relevant effect sizes (Cohen’s d ≥ 0.4). Moreover, at 2 weeks, PAE increased correlated expression of exmiRNAs across chromosomes, suggesting potential co-regulation. In confirmatory factor analysis, the variance in expression for PAE-altered exmiRNAs at 2 weeks and 6.5 months was best described by three-factor models. Pathway analysis found that factors at 2 weeks were associated with (F1) cell maturation, cell cycle inhibition, and somatic growth, (F2) cell survival, apoptosis, cardiac development, and metabolism, and (F3) cell proliferation, skeletal development, hematopoiesis, and inflammation, and at 6.5 months with (F1) neurodevelopment, neural crest/mesoderm-derivative development and growth, (F2) immune system and inflammation, and (F3) somatic growth and cardiovascular development. Factors F3 at 2 weeks and F2 at 6.5 months partially mediated PAE-induced growth deficits, and factor F3 at 2 weeks partially mediated effects of PAE on infant recognition memory at 6.5 months. These findings indicate that infant exmiRNAs can help identify infants who will exhibit PAE-related deficits in growth and cognition.


2004 ◽  
Vol 24 (16) ◽  
pp. 7179-7187 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bartholomew A. Pederson ◽  
Hanying Chen ◽  
Jill M. Schroeder ◽  
Weinian Shou ◽  
Anna A. DePaoli-Roach ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Glycogen serves as a repository of glucose in many mammalian tissues. Mice lacking this glucose reserve in muscle, heart, and several other tissues were generated by disruption of the GYS1 gene, which encodes an isoform of glycogen synthase. Crossing mice heterozygous for the GYS1 disruption resulted in a significant underrepresentation of GYS1-null mice in the offspring. Timed matings established that Mendelian inheritance was followed for up to 18.5 days postcoitum (dpc) and that ∼90% of GYS1-null animals died soon after birth due to impaired cardiac function. Defects in cardiac development began between 11.5 and 14.5 dpc. At 18.5 dpc, the hearts were significantly smaller, with reduced ventricular chamber size and enlarged atria. Consistent with impaired cardiac function, edema, pooling of blood, and hemorrhagic liver were seen. Glycogen synthase and glycogen were undetectable in cardiac muscle and skeletal muscle from the surviving null mice, and the hearts showed normal morphology and function. Congenital heart disease is one of the most common birth defects in humans, at up to 1 in 50 live births. The results provide the first direct evidence that the ability to synthesize glycogen in cardiac muscle is critical for normal heart development and hence that its impairment could be a significant contributor to congenital heart defects.


2014 ◽  
Vol 115 (suppl_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Konstantina Ioanna Sereti ◽  
Paniz Kamran Rashani ◽  
Peng Zhao ◽  
Reza Ardehali

It has been proposed that cardiac development in lower vertebrates is driven by the proliferation of cardiomyocytes. Similarly, cycling myocytes have been suggested to direct cardiac regeneration in neonatal mice after injury. Although, the role of cardiomyocyte proliferation in cardiac tissue generation during development has been well documented, the extent of this contribution as well as the role of other cell types, such as progenitor cells, still remains controversial. Here we used a novel stochastic four-color Cre-dependent reporter system (Rainbow) that allows labeling at a single cell level and retrospective analysis of the progeny. Cardiac progenitors expressing Mesp1 or Nkx2.5 were shown to be a source of cardiomyocytes during embryonic development while the onset of αMHC expression marked the developmental stage where the capacity of cardiac cells to proliferate diminishes significantly. Through direct clonal analysis we provide strong evidence supporting that cardiac progenitors, as opposed to mature cardiomyocytes, are the main source of cardiomyocytes during cardiac development. Moreover, we have identified quadri-, tri-, bi, and uni-potent progenitors that at a single cell level can generate cardiomyocytes, fibroblasts, endothelial and smooth muscle cells. Although existing cardiomyocytes undergo limited proliferation, our data indicates that it is mainly the progenitors that contribute to heart development. Furthermore, we show that the limited proliferation capacity of cardiomyocytes observed during normal development was enhanced following neonatal cardiac injury allowing almost complete regeneration of the scared tissue. However, this ability was largely absent in adult injured hearts. Detailed characterization of dividing cardiomyocytes and proliferating progenitors would greatly benefit the development of novel therapeutic options for cardiovascular diseases.


2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeremy Kah Sheng Pang ◽  
Qian Hua Phua ◽  
Boon-Seng Soh

AbstractDevelopment of the complex human heart is tightly regulated at multiple levels, maintaining multipotency and proliferative state in the embryonic cardiovascular progenitors and thereafter suppressing progenitor characteristics to allow for terminal differentiation and maturation. Small regulatory microRNAs (miRNAs) are at the level of post-transcriptional gene suppressors, which enhance the degradation or decay of their target protein-coding mRNAs. These miRNAs are known to play roles in a large number of biological events, cardiovascular development being no exception. A number of critical cardiac-specific miRNAs have been identified, of which structural developmental defects have been linked to dysregulation of miRNAs in the proliferating cardiac stem cells. These miRNAs present in the stem cell niche are lost when the cardiac progenitors terminally differentiate, resulting in the postnatal mitotic arrest of the heart. Therapeutic applications of these miRNAs extend to the realm of heart failure, whereby the death of heart cells in the ageing heart cannot be replaced due to the arrest of cell division. By utilizing miRNA therapy to control cell cycling, the regenerative potential of matured myocardium can be restored. This review will address the various cardiac progenitor-related miRNAs that control the development and proliferative potential of the heart.


1995 ◽  
Vol 269 (6) ◽  
pp. H1843-H1851 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Keller ◽  
J. D. Rouzeau ◽  
F. Farhadian ◽  
C. Wisnewsky ◽  
F. Marotte ◽  
...  

We have analyzed the transition between isoforms of the glycolytic enzyme enolase (2-phospho-D-glycerate hydrolyase; EC 4.2.1.11) in rat heart during normal and pathological growth. A striking fall in embryonic alpha-enolase gene expression occurs during cardiac development, mostly controlled at pretranslational steps. In fetal and neonatal hearts, muscle-specific beta-enolase gene expression is a minor contributor to total enolase. Control mechanisms of beta-enolase gene expression must include posttranscriptional steps. Aortic stenosis induces a rapid and drastic decrease in beta-enolase transcript level in cardiomyocytes, followed by the fall in beta-subunit level. In contrast, alpha-enolase transcript level is not significantly altered, although the corresponding subunit level increases in nonmuscle cells. We conclude that, like fetal heart, hypertrophic heart is characterized by a high ratio of alpha- to beta-enolase subunit concentrations. This study indicates that the decrease in beta-enolase gene expression may be linked to beneficial energetic changes in contractile properties occurring during cardiac hypertrophy


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher J. Derrick ◽  
Eric J. G. Pollitt ◽  
Ashley Sanchez Sevilla Uruchurtu ◽  
Farah Hussein ◽  
Emily S. Noёl

AbstractDuring early vertebrate heart development, the heart transitions from a linear tube to a complex asymmetric structure. This process includes looping of the tube and ballooning of the emerging cardiac chambers, which occur simultaneously with growth of the heart. A key driver of cardiac growth is deployment of cells from the Second Heart Field (SHF) into both poles of the heart, with cardiac morphogenesis and growth intimately linked in heart development. Laminin is a core component of extracellular matrix (ECM) basement membranes, and although mutations in specific laminin subunits are linked with a variety of cardiac abnormalities, including congenital heart disease and dilated cardiomyopathy, no role for laminin has been identified in early vertebrate heart morphogenesis. We identified dynamic, tissue-specific expression of laminin subunit genes in the developing zebrafish heart, supporting a role for laminins in heart morphogenesis.lamb1amutants exhibit cardiomegaly from 2dpf onwards, with subsequent progressive defects in cardiac morphogenesis characterised by a failure of the chambers to compact around the developing atrioventricular canal. We show that loss oflamb1aresults in excess addition of SHF cells to the atrium, revealing that Lamb1a functions to limit heart size during cardiac development by restricting SHF addition to the venous pole.lamb1amutants exhibit hallmarks of altered haemodynamics, and specifically blocking cardiac contractility inlamb1amutants rescues heart size and atrial SHF addition. Furthermore, we identify that FGF and RA signalling, two conserved pathways promoting SHF addition, are regulated by heart contractility and are dysregulated inlamb1amutants, suggesting that laminin mediates interactions between SHF deployment, heart biomechanics, and biochemical signalling during heart development. Together, this describes the first requirement for laminins in early vertebrate heart morphogenesis, reinforcing the importance of specialised ECM composition in cardiac development.


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