Literature DB >> 22652098

The arterial and cardiac epicardium in development, disease and repair.

Adriana C Gittenberger-de Groot1, Elizabeth M Winter, Margot M Bartelings, Marie Jose Goumans, Marco C DeRuiter, Robert E Poelmann.   

Abstract

The importance of the epicardium covering the heart and the intrapericardial part of the great arteries has reached a new summit. It has evolved as a major cellular component with impact both in development, disease and more recently also repair potential. The role of the epicardium in development, its differentiation from a proepicardial organ at the venous pole (vPEO) and the differentiation capacities of the vPEO initiating cardiac epicardium (cEP) into epicardium derived cells (EPDCs) have been extensively described in recent reviews on growth and transcription factor pathways. In short, the epicardium is the source of the interstitial, the annulus fibrosus and the adventitial fibroblasts, and differentiates into the coronary arterial smooth muscle cells. Furthermore, EPDCs induce growth of the compact myocardium and differentiation of the Purkinje fibers. This review includes an arterial pole located PEO (aPEO) that provides the epicardium covering the intrapericardial great vessels. In avian and mouse models disturbance of epicardial outgrowth and maturation leads to a broad spectrum of cardiac anomalies with main focus on non-compaction of the myocardium, deficient annulus fibrosis, valve malformations and coronary artery abnormalities. The discovery that in disease both arterial and cardiac epicardium can again differentiate into EPDCs and thus reactivate its embryonic program and potential has highly broadened the scope of research interest. This reactivation is seen after myocardial infarction and also in aneurysm formation of the ascending aorta. Use of EPDCs for cell therapy show their positive function in paracrine mediated repair processes which can be additive when combined with the cardiac progenitor stem cells that probably share the same embryonic origin with EPDCs. Research into the many cell-autonomous and cell-cell-based capacities of the adult epicardium will open up new realistic therapeutic avenues.
Copyright © 2012 International Society of Differentiation. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22652098     DOI: 10.1016/j.diff.2012.05.002

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Differentiation        ISSN: 0301-4681            Impact factor:   3.880


  44 in total

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4.  Tcf21 regulates the specification and maturation of proepicardial cells.

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5.  Measurement science in the circulatory system.

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6.  Epicardium-Derived Cells Formed After Myocardial Injury Display Phagocytic Activity Permitting In Vivo Labeling and Tracking.

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7.  14-3-3epsilon controls multiple developmental processes in the mouse heart.

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Review 9.  Embryonic Chicken (Gallus gallus domesticus) as a Model of Cardiac Biology and Development.

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Journal:  Comp Med       Date:  2019-06-10       Impact factor: 0.982

Review 10.  Zebrafish models in cardiac development and congenital heart birth defects.

Authors:  Shu Tu; Neil C Chi
Journal:  Differentiation       Date:  2012-06-15       Impact factor: 3.880

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