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1.
PLoS One ; 14(5): e0216987, 2019.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31091274

ABSTRACT

Chronic pressure overload due to aortic valve stenosis leads to pathological cardiac hypertrophy and heart failure. Hypertrophy is accompanied by an increase in myocyte surface area, which requires a proportional increase in the number of cell-cell and cell-matrix contacts to withstand enhanced workload. In a proteomic analysis we identified nerve injury-induced protein 1 (Ninjurin1), a 16kDa transmembrane cell-surface protein involved in cell adhesion and nerve repair, to be increased in hypertrophic hearts from patients with aortic stenosis. We hypothesised that Ninjurin1 is involved in myocyte hypertrophy. We analyzed cardiac biopsies from aortic-stenosis patients and control patients undergoing elective heart surgery. We studied cardiac hypertrophy in mice after transverse aortic constriction and angiotensin II infusions, and performed mechanistic analyses in cultured myocytes. We assessed the physiological role of ninjurin1 in zebrafish during heart and skeletal muscle development. Ninjurin1 was increased in hearts of aortic stenosis patients, compared to controls, as well as in hearts from mice with cardiac hypertrophy. Besides the 16kDa Ninjurin1 (Ninjurin1-16) we detected a 24kDa variant of Ninjurin1 (Ninjurin1-24), which was predominantly expressed during myocyte hypertrophy. We disclosed that the higher molecular weight of Ninjurin1-24 was caused by N-glycosylation. Ninjurin1-16 was contained in the cytoplasm of myocytes where it colocalized with stress-fibers. In contrast, Ninjurin1-24 was localized at myocyte membranes. Gain and loss-of-function experiments showed that Ninjurin1-24 plays a role in myocyte hypertrophy and myogenic differentiation in vitro. Reduced levels of ninjurin1 impaired cardiac and skeletal muscle development in zebrafish. We conclude that Ninjurin1 contributes to myocyte growth and differentiation, and that these effects are mainly mediated by N-glycosylated Ninjurin1-24.


Subject(s)
Aortic Valve Stenosis/genetics , Cardiomegaly/genetics , Cell Adhesion Molecules, Neuronal/genetics , Muscle, Striated/growth & development , Nerve Growth Factors/genetics , Animals , Aortic Valve Stenosis/pathology , Cardiomegaly/pathology , Cell Differentiation/genetics , Disease Models, Animal , Female , Humans , Loss of Function Mutation/genetics , Male , Mice , Muscle Development/genetics , Muscle, Striated/metabolism , Muscle, Striated/pathology , Myocytes, Cardiac/metabolism , Myocytes, Cardiac/pathology , Signal Transduction/genetics , Zebrafish
2.
Nat Commun ; 9(1): 2001, 2018 05 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29784942

ABSTRACT

The vertebrate heart develops from several progenitor lineages. After early-differentiating first heart field (FHF) progenitors form the linear heart tube, late-differentiating second heart field (SHF) progenitors extend the atrium and ventricle, and form inflow and outflow tracts (IFT/OFT). However, the position and migration of late-differentiating progenitors during heart formation remains unclear. Here, we track zebrafish heart development using transgenics based on the cardiopharyngeal gene tbx1. Live imaging uncovers a tbx1 reporter-expressing cell sheath that continuously disseminates from the lateral plate mesoderm towards the forming heart tube. High-speed imaging and optogenetic lineage tracing corroborates that the zebrafish ventricle forms through continuous addition from the undifferentiated progenitor sheath followed by late-phase accrual of the bulbus arteriosus (BA). FGF inhibition during sheath migration reduces ventricle size and abolishes BA formation, refining the window of FGF action during OFT formation. Our findings consolidate previous end-point analyses and establish zebrafish ventricle formation as a continuous process.


Subject(s)
Stem Cells/cytology , Zebrafish/embryology , Animals , Cell Differentiation , Cell Lineage , Female , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental , Heart Ventricles/cytology , Heart Ventricles/embryology , Heart Ventricles/metabolism , Male , Mesoderm/embryology , Mesoderm/metabolism , Morphogenesis , Stem Cells/metabolism , T-Box Domain Proteins/genetics , T-Box Domain Proteins/metabolism , Zebrafish/genetics , Zebrafish/metabolism , Zebrafish Proteins/genetics , Zebrafish Proteins/metabolism
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