11 research outputs found

    Epicardium-derived cells are important for correct development of the Purkinje fibers in the avian heart

    Get PDF
    During embryonic development, the proepicardial organ (PEO) grows out over the heart surface to form the epicardium. Following epithelial-mesenchymal transformation, epicardium-derived cells (EPDCs) migrate into the heart and contribute to the developing coronary arteries, to the valves, and to the myocardium. The peripheral Purkinje fiber network develops from differentiating cardiomyocytes in the ventricular myocardium. Intrigued by the close spatial relationship between the final destinations of migrating EPDCs and Purkinje fiber differentiation in the avian heart, that is, surrounding the coronary arteries and at subendocardial sites, we investigated whether inhibition of epicardial outgrowth would disturb cardiomyocyte differentiation into Purkinje fibers. To this end, epicardial development was inhibited mechanically with a membrane, or genetically, by suppressing epicardial epithelial-to-mesenchymal transformation with antisense retroviral vectors affecting Ets transcription factor levels (n = 4, HH39-41). In both epicardial inhibition models, we evaluated Purkinje fiber development by EAP-300 immunohistochemistry and found that restraints on EPDC development resulted in morphologically aberrant differentiation of Purkinje fibers. Purkinje fiber hypoplasia was observed both periarterially and at subendocardial positions. Furthermore, the cells were morphologically abnormal and not aligned in orderly Purkinje fibers. We conclude that EPDCs are instrumental in Purkinje fiber differentiation, and we hypothesize that they coo

    Induction and patterning of the cardiac conduction system

    No full text
    The cardiac conduction system (CCS) is the component of the heart that initiates and maintains a rhythmic heartbeat. As the embryonic heart forms, the CCS must continue to develop and mature in a coordinated manner to ensure that proper pace making potential and distribution of action potential is maintained at all stages. This requires not only the formation of distinct and disparate components of the CCS, but the integration of these components into a functioning whole as the heart matures. Though research in this area of development may have lagged behind other areas of heart development, in recent years there has been much progress in understanding the ontogeny of the CCS and the developmental cues that drive its formation. This is largely due to studies on the avian heart as well as the use of molecular biology approaches. This review gives a perspective on advances in understanding the development of the vertebrate CCS, and reports new data illuminating the mechanism of conduction cell determination and maintenance in the mammalian heart. As much of our knowledge about the development of the CCS has been derived from the chick embryo, one important area facing the field is the relationship and similarities between the structure and development of avian and mammalian conduction systems. Specifically, the morphology of the distal elements of the mammalian CCS and the manner in which its components are recruited from working cardiomyocytes are areas of research that will, hopefully, receive more attention in the near future. A more general and outstanding question is how the disparate components of all vertebrate conduction systems integrate into a functional entity during embryogenesis. There is mounting evidence linking the patterning and formation of the CCS to instructive cues derived from the cardiac vasculature and, more specifically, to hemodynamic-responsive factors produced by cardiac endothelia. This highlights the need for a greater understanding of the biophysical forces acting on, and created by, the cardiovascular system during embryonic development. A better understanding of these processes will be necessary if therapeutics are to be developed that allow the regeneration of damaged cardiac tissues or the construction of biologically engineered heart tissues

    Functional and morphological evidence for a ventricular conduction system in zebrafish and Xenopus hearts.

    No full text
    Zebrafish and Xenopus have become popular model organisms for studying vertebrate development of many organ systems, including the heart. However, it is not clear whether the single ventricular hearts of these species possess any equivalent of the specialized ventricular conduction system found in higher vertebrates. Isolated hearts of adult zebrafish (Danio rerio) and African toads (Xenopus laevis) were stained with voltage-sensitive dye and optically mapped in spontaneous and paced rhythms followed by histological examination focusing on myocardial continuity between the atrium and the ventricle. Spread of the excitation wave through the atria was uniform with average activation times of 20 +/- 2 and 50 +/- 2 ms for zebrafish and Xenopus toads, respectively. After a delay of 47 +/- 8 and 414 +/- 16 ms, the ventricle became activated first in the apical region. Ectopic ventricular activation was propagated significantly more slowly (total ventricular activation times: 24 +/- 3 vs. 14 +/- 2 ms in zebrafish and 74 +/- 14 vs. 35 +/- 9 ms in Xenopus). Although we did not observe any histologically defined tracts of specialized conduction cells within the ventricle, there were trabecular bands with prominent polysialic acid-neural cell adhesion molecule staining forming direct myocardial continuity between the atrioventricular canal and the apex of the ventricle; i.e., the site of the epicardial breakthrough. We thus conclude that these hearts are able to achieve the apex-to-base ventricular activation pattern observed in higher vertebrates in the apparent absence of differentiated conduction fascicles, suggesting that the ventricular trabeculae serve as a functional equivalent of the His-Purkinje system

    Induction and patterning of the Purkinje fibre network

    No full text
    Impulse-conducting Purkinje cells differentiate from myocytes during embryogenesis. In the embryonic chicken heart, this conversion of contractile myocytes into conduction cells occurs subendocardially and periarterially. The unique sites of Purkinje fibre differentiation suggest that a shear stress-induced paracrine signal from the endocardium and arterial beds may induce adjacent myocytes to differentiate into conduction cells. Consistent with this model, Purkinje fibre marker genes can be induced in cultured embryonic myocytes by endothelin (ET), an endothelial cell-derived signalling peptide. This inductive response is, however, gradually lost from myocytes as embryos develop, and mature myocytes express only genes characteristic of hypertrophy in response to ET. In vivo, active ET is produced, through proteolytic processing, from its precursor by ET-converting enzyme 1 (ECE1) and triggers signalling by binding to its receptors, ETA and ETB. In the embryonic heart, the expression of these ET signalling components changes dynamically, defining the site and timing of Purkinje fibre differentiation within the ventricular myocardium during chick embryogenesis
    corecore