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Single-cell imaging and transcriptomic analyses of endogenous cardiomyocyte dedifferentiation and cycling.

Citation
Zhang, Y., et al. “Single-Cell Imaging And Transcriptomic Analyses Of Endogenous Cardiomyocyte Dedifferentiation And Cycling.”. Cell Discovery, p. 30.
Center University of Washington
Author Yiqiang Zhang, Nuria Gago-Lopez, Ning Li, Zhenhe Zhang, Naima Alver, Yonggang Liu, Amy M Martinson, Avin Mehri, William Robb MacLellan
Keywords Cell growth, Mechanisms of disease
Abstract

While it is recognized that there are low levels of new cardiomyocyte (CM) formation throughout life, the source of these new CM generates much debate. One hypothesis is that these new CMs arise from the proliferation of existing CMs potentially after dedifferentiation although direct evidence for this is lacking. Here we explore the mechanisms responsible for CM renewal in vivo using multi-reporter transgenic mouse models featuring efficient adult CM (ACM) genetic cell fate mapping and real-time cardiomyocyte lineage and dedifferentiation reporting. Our results demonstrate that non-myocytes (e.g., cardiac progenitor cells) contribute negligibly to new ACM formation at baseline or after cardiac injury. In contrast, we found a significant increase in dedifferentiated, cycling CMs in post-infarct hearts. ACM cell cycling was enhanced within the dedifferentiated CM population. Single-nucleus transcriptomic analysis demonstrated that CMs identified with dedifferentiation reporters had significant down-regulation in gene networks for cardiac hypertrophy, contractile, and electrical function, with shifts in metabolic pathways, but up-regulation in signaling pathways and gene sets for active cell cycle, proliferation, and cell survival. The results demonstrate that dedifferentiation may be an important prerequisite for CM proliferation and explain the limited but measurable cardiac myogenesis seen after myocardial infarction (MI).

Year of Publication
2019
Journal
Cell discovery
Volume
5
Number of Pages
30
Date Published
12/2019
ISSN Number
2056-5968
DOI
10.1038/s41421-019-0095-9
Alternate Journal
Cell Discov
PMID
31231540
PMCID
PMC6547664
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