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Uncontrolled angiogenic precursor expansion causes coronary artery anomalies in mice lacking Pofut1.

Citation
Wang, Y., et al. “Uncontrolled Angiogenic Precursor Expansion Causes Coronary Artery Anomalies In Mice Lacking Pofut1.”. Nature Communications, p. 578.
Center Albert Einstein College of Medicine
Author Yidong Wang, Bingruo Wu, Pengfei Lu, Donghong Zhang, Brian Wu, Shweta Varshney, Gonzalo Del Monte-Nieto, Zhenwu Zhuang, Rabab Charafeddine, Adam H Kramer, Nicolas E Sibinga, Nikolaos G Frangogiannis, Richard N Kitsis, Ralf H Adams, Kari Alitalo, David J Sharp, Richard P Harvey, Pamela Stanley, Bin Zhou
Abstract

Coronary artery anomalies may cause life-threatening cardiac complications; however, developmental mechanisms underpinning coronary artery formation remain ill-defined. Here we identify an angiogenic cell population for coronary artery formation in mice. Regulated by a DLL4/NOTCH1/VEGFA/VEGFR2 signaling axis, these angiogenic cells generate mature coronary arteries. The NOTCH modulator POFUT1 critically regulates this signaling axis. POFUT1 inactivation disrupts signaling events and results in excessive angiogenic cell proliferation and plexus formation, leading to anomalous coronary arteries, myocardial infarction and heart failure. Simultaneous VEGFR2 inactivation fully rescues these defects. These findings show that dysregulated angiogenic precursors link coronary anomalies to ischemic heart disease.Though coronary arteries are crucial for heart function, the mechanisms guiding their formation are largely unknown. Here, Wang et al. identify a unique, endocardially-derived angiogenic precursor cell population for coronary artery formation in mice and show that a DLL4/NOTCH1/VEGFA/VEGFR2 signaling axis is key for coronary artery development.

Year of Publication
2017
Journal
Nature communications
Volume
8
Issue
1
Number of Pages
578
Date Published
12/2017
ISSN Number
2041-1723
DOI
10.1038/s41467-017-00654-w
Alternate Journal
Nat Commun
PMID
28924218
PMCID
PMC5603578
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