| Literature DB >> 24926431 |
Marie M Lockhart1, Aimee L Phelps1, Maurice J B van den Hoff2, Andy Wessels1.
Abstract
Insight into the role of the epicardium in cardiac development and regeneration has significantly improved over the past ten years. This is mainly due to the increasing availability of new mouse models for the study of the epicardial lineage. Here we focus on the growing understanding of the significance of the epicardium and epicardially-derived cells in the formation of the atrioventricular (AV) junction. First, through the process of epicardial epithelial-to-mesenchymal transformation (epiEMT), the subepicardial AV mesenchyme is formed. Subsequently, the AV-epicardium and epicardially-derived cells (EPDCs) form the annulus fibrosus, a structure important for the electrical separation of atrial and ventricular myocardium. Finally, the AV-EPDCs preferentially migrate into the parietal AV valve leaflets, largely replacing the endocardially-derived cell population. In this review, we provide an overview of what is currently known about the regulation of the events involved in this process.Entities:
Keywords: annulus fibrosus; atrioventricular; cardiovascular; epicardium; heart; leaflets; sulcus; valves
Year: 2014 PMID: 24926431 PMCID: PMC4051323 DOI: 10.3390/jdb2010001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Dev Biol ISSN: 2221-3759
Figure 1Epicardially-derived cells contribute to the parietal leaflets of the atrioventricular (AV) valves. This figure shows a transverse section of a 17ED mouse heart from a cross between a male Wt1Cre mouse and a female R26mT/mG reporter mouse. This cell-lineage tracing model shows that the epicardially-derived cells (in red) at the AV junction (AV-EPDCs) preferentially contribute to the right parietal (rpAV) and left parietal (lpAV) leaflets of the AV valves in a mouse heart at 17 embryonic days of development. The myocardial structures are stained for the myosin heavy chain with MF20 (green), the section was counterstained with DAPI (blue in B) to stain all nuclei. AoAV = aortic leaflet of left AV valve; AS = atrial septum; LA = left atrium; LV = left ventricle; lpAV = left parietal AV valve leaflet; PuV = pulmonary vein; RA = right atrium; RV = right ventricle; rpAV = right parietal AV valve leaflet; septAV = septal leaflet of right AV valve.
Figure 2Cascade of events involving the epicardial and epicardially-derived cells in the development of the AV junction. The epicardium plays a crucial role in virtually all aspects of the development of the structures at the AV junction. While insight into the molecular mechanisms that control the formation of the epicardium proper as well as epicardial EMT is steadily growing, virtually nothing is known about the molecular mechanisms that govern the formation of the annulus fibrosus and the ones that are involved in the migration of AV-EPDCs into the parietal AV valve leaflets.
Figure 3Schematic representation of the contribution of the AV epicardium and the epicardially-derived cells to the development of the AV junction. After formation of the epicardial epithelium (green), epiEMT generates a population of AV-EPDCs (green cells in panel A) that, as far as their gene expression profile is concerned, are still very similar to the epicardium itself. However, when the AV-EPDCs migrate further into the AV sulcus and approach the AV myocardium (red cells), the molecular profile of the AV-EPDCs changes drastically as the expression of genes characteristically found in the mesenchyme of the annulus fibrosus (e.g., MMP2) and the AV cushions (e.g., Sox9) is upregulated. These “differentiated” AV-EPDCs (red cells in panel A) then penetrate the AV myocardium to form the annulus fibrosus (panel B) and migrate into the parietal AV valve leaflets where they intermingle with the endocardially-derived mesenchymal cells (ENDCs; blue cells in panels A and B).