| Literature DB >> 29056683 |
Chris J R Hughes1, J Roger Jacobs2.
Abstract
The extracellular matrix (ECM) is a dynamic scaffold within organs and tissues that enables cell morphogenesis and provides structural support. Changes in the composition and organisation of the cardiac ECM are required for normal development. Congenital and age-related cardiac diseases can arise from mis-regulation of structural ECM proteins (Collagen, Laminin) or their receptors (Integrin). Key regulators of ECM turnover include matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) and their inhibitors, tissue inhibitors of matrix metalloproteinases (TIMPs). MMP expression is increased in mice, pigs, and dogs with cardiomyopathy. The complexity and longevity of vertebrate animals makes a short-lived, genetically tractable model organism, such as Drosophila melanogaster, an attractive candidate for study. We survey ECM macromolecules and their role in heart development and growth, which are conserved between Drosophila and vertebrates, with focus upon the consequences of altered expression or distribution. The Drosophila heart resembles that of vertebrates during early development, and is amenable to in vivo analysis. Experimental manipulation of gene function in a tissue- or temporally-regulated manner can reveal the function of adhesion or ECM genes in the heart. Perturbation of the function of ECM proteins, or of the MMPs that facilitate ECM remodelling, induces cardiomyopathies in Drosophila, including cardiodilation, arrhythmia, and cardia bifida, that provide mechanistic insight into cardiac disease in mammals.Entities:
Keywords: Collagen; Drosophila; ECM; Integrin; MMP; TIMP; cardiomyopathy; genetics; model organism; remodelling
Year: 2017 PMID: 29056683 PMCID: PMC5606597 DOI: 10.3390/vetsci4020024
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vet Sci ISSN: 2306-7381
Figure 1Cardioblast (CB) migration during Drosophila embryogenesis. (A–A”) Stage 12–13 embryo. (A) Perspective view of a whole embryo showing cardiac precursor cells associated with the dorsal ectoderm prior to dorsal closure; (A’) Cross-sectional impression showing the lateral-most mesodermal cells, which have become specified as CB precursors; (A”) CB precursors prior to the extension of the motile apical domain. (B–B”) Stage 14–15 embryo. (B) Lateral ectoderm and CBs migrate dorso-medially and displace the amnioserosa; (B’) Cross-sectional impression showing Leading Edge activity. CBs extend a motile apical domain towards the midline; (B”) CBs assume a teardrop shape with the Cadherin-rich apical domain forming a Leading Edge. The basal domain is quiescent. The pre-luminal domain localises Dystroglycan, βPS-Integrin, Multiplexin, and the Slit-Robo complex. (C–C”) Stage 17 embryo. (C) CBs make contralateral contact at the midline upon dorsal closure. (C’) Cross-sectional impression showing paired CBs at the dorsal midline, flanked by PCs; (C”) Formation of the heart tube. CBs form a dorsal and ventral seam at the Cadherin-based junctional domain to enclose a lumen. Dorsal at top. A: anterior; AS: amnioserosa; BD: basal domain; CB: cardioblast; D: dorsal; Ec: ectoderm; JD: junctional domain; LE: Leading Edge; LD: luminal domain; Me: mesoderm; P: posterior; PC: pericardial cell; V: ventral.
Figure 2Extracellular matrix in the larval Drosophila heart. Enlargement of the cross section shown within the red box (lower left) reveals Ruthenium Red-labelled ECM proteoglycans on both the external (black arrowhead) and luminal (white arrowhead) surfaces of the heart muscle cell, with no endothelium. H: heart muscle; PC: pericardial cell. Scale bar is 2.0 microns.
Figure 3Localisation of ECM proteins and receptors in the embryonic Drosophila heart. (A) Cross-sectional impression of a stage 17 embryonic dorsal vessel with flanking PCs. The transmembrane receptors βPS-Integrin (βPS) and Dystroglycan (Dg) are present along the cardioblast surface, but are concentrated at the luminal domain. Dg is excluded from the junctional domain. Laminin A (LanA) is present ubiquitously. Viking Collagen-IV (Vkg) localises to the basal lamina and is expressed within the heart lumen. Pericardin (Prc) is absent from the lumen. Dorsal at top. CB: cardioblast; JD: junctional domain; L: lumen; PC: pericardial cell; (B) A portion of the embryonic dorsal vessel in coronal view (frontal plane), illustrating CBs but not PCs. Alary muscles have not been included for simplicity; (C–G) Distribution of ECM proteins and receptors in stage 17 embryos. Anterior on left. (C) Vkg is expressed along the basal lamina of cardiac cells, localised to the luminal and abluminal surfaces. The striated lines running parallel the heart tube is an eggshell artefact; (D) Prc forms bundles localised to the abluminal surface of the heart tube, and envelopes the PCs; (E) LanA is expressed along the luminal and abluminal cardiac cell surface and within muscle costameres; (F) Dg localises to the apical CB surfaces, and to costameres; (G) βPS-Integrin is expressed primarily along the CB apical and luminal surfaces, and to a lesser extent along the basal surface; (H) Cross-sectional distribution of Dg and βPS-Integrin in a stage 17 embryo. Dg is strongly expressed along the CB luminal surface, and is also present on the abluminal surface, with weak ventral expression. Integrin is strongly expressed along the CB luminal surface, and weakly expressed along the abluminal surface. Dorsal at top. Asterisks label CBs; arrows label the heart lumen; arrowheads label PCs.
Figure 4Localisation of ECM proteins and receptors in the larval Drosophila heart. (A) Cross-sectional impression of a third instar larval dorsal vessel with flanking PCs. The transmembrane receptors βPS-Integrin and Dg are present along the luminal domain and at the abluminal surfaces of the heart tube. LanA is ubiquitous. Vkg localises to the basal lamina and, at lower levels, within the heart lumen. Prc is absent from the lumen. Dorsal at top; (B) The larval dorsal vessel in coronal view (frontal plane), illustrating the aorta and the heart chamber, divided by valve cells. The aorta is comprised of non-contractile cardiomyocytes. The heart chamber is wider and formed from contractile cardiomyocytes and non-contractile ostial cells. Anterior on left. AM: alary muscle; CM: cardiomyocyte; (C–G) Distribution of ECM proteins and receptors in late third instar larvae. Anterior on left; (C) Vkg is expressed along the basal lamina of cardiac cells, as well as in hemocytes and along the alary muscles and trachea. Actin forms parallel myofibrils that envelop the heart tube, and localises to alary muscles; (D) Prc networks localise to the abluminal surface of the heart tube, and envelope the PCs; (E) LanA is expressed along the luminal and abluminal cardiac cell surface, along the pericardial cell surface, and within muscle costameres (banded pattern); (F) Dg is expressed along the heart tube and pericardial cell surface, and within the costameres. Alary muscle tissue is also labelled; (G) βPS-Integrin is expressed along the heart tube and pericardial cell surface. Integrin is expressed along costameres (banded pattern); (H) Five-day-old adult stained for βPS-Integrin. Integrin is expressed by new longitudinal muscles ventral to the heart tube, and by PC and costameres.
Structural proteins of the BM.
| Collagen-IV | Cell adhesion, Basal Lamina | Mutants exhibit alary muscle and PC detachment, and accumulation of Perlecan within hemocytes [ | Up-regulated post-infarction during repair in rats [ | |
| N/A (Collagen-IV α-like) | Cell adhesion | Mutants exhibit cardiomyocytes that do not properly polarise and fail to align, detachment of PCs and alary muscles from the heart tube, and reduced lifespan [ | N/A (see Collagen-IV) | |
| Collagen-XV/XVIII | Lumen expansion | Loss of function results in a small lumen and diminished fractional shortening; over-expression results in increased lumen size or development of ectopic lumens [ | Collagen-XV deficiency in mice causes disorganised fibrillar Collagen, increased left ventricle (LV) myocardial stiffness, cardiac hypotrophy, aberrant cardiomyocyte structure, and cardiomyopathy [ | |
| Laminin | Cell adhesion, Collagen assembly | Mutants show failed accumulation of Perlecan, Collagen-IV, and Prc [ | Decreased expression during ischemic heart failure [ | |
| SPARC | Collagen assembly | Knock-down causes disorganisation of Laminin, failed Collagen-IV assembly, and reduced heart contractility [ | Up-regulated in older mice, causing ventricular stiffness [ | |
| TSP-3/4 | Cell adhesion | Mutants exhibit detachment of muscle cells from tendons [ | Canine TSP-1 is up-regulated post-infarction [ | |
| ADAMTSL6 | Cell adhesion | In mutants, Prc does not localise between PCs and heart tube; PCs and alary muscles detach from the heart tube, and lifespan is reduced [ | Over-expression results in the accumulation of Fibrillin-1-containing ECM microfibrils in mice [ |
Receptors and signalling cues of the BM.
| β-Integrin | Cell-ECM linker, adhesion signalling | Age-dependent up-regulation results in increased myocardial stiffness [ | Age-dependent up-regulation results in increased aortic stiffness in monkeys [ | |
| Dg | Cell-ECM linker | Mutants exhibit mis-expression of epithelial cell apical markers in basal domain and loss of anterior-posterior polarity, as well as age-related muscular degeneration [ | In humans, reduced Dg glycosylation weakens ECM attachment, and causes DCM [ | |
| Dscam | Cell adhesion and signalling | Mutants exhibit reduced CB Leading Edge velocity, disrupted (non-continuous) heart lumen [ | Candidate Down syndrome congenital heart defect (CHD) gene in humans [ | |
| Sdc | Cell adhesion and signalling | Mutants and RNAi knock-downs exhibit gaps between CBs and between PCs, mis-localisation of Prc, and failure of CBs to polarise (no apicalisation of Robo/Slit) [ | Contributes to post-infarction fibrosis ECM stiffness and cardiac hypertrophy (reviewed in [ | |
| Robo | Morphogen receptor | Mutants exhibit gaps between CBs at the midline, and small, intermittent, or no lumen [ | Mutant mice exhibit cardiac valve and septum morphogenesis, ectopic pericardial cavities, and caval vein malformation [ | |
| Slit | Secreted morphogen | Mutants exhibit CB mis-alignment and gaps between CBs at the midline, resulting in small, intermittent, or no lumen [ | Mutant mice exhibit reduced angiogenesis, cardiac valve and septum morphogenesis, ectopic pericardial cavities, and caval vein malformation [ | |
| DCC | Morphogen receptor | Mutants exhibit CB mis-alignment at the midline, and defective contralateral attachments between CBs results in an open or enlarged lumen, or no lumen [ | Cardioprotective role in elevating nitric oxide production [ |
Remodelling proteases of the BM.
| MMP1-28 | ECM protease | MMP1 mutants have a reduced heart lumen, and embryonic CB migration is less organised; in MMP2 mutants embryonic CBs do not form cell junctions, resulting in reduced or absent heart lumen; surviving larvae show cardia bifida [ | MMP1/2/3/7/8/9/14 show increased protein expression in DCM (reviewed in [ | |
| TIMP1-4 | Inhibitor of ECM proteases | Ectopic ectodermal expression of TIMP inhibits heart lumen formation [ | Mouse TIMP mutants experience adverse remodelling / increased ECM degradation post-infarction [ |
Figure 5Mis-regulation of ECM proteins in Drosophila results in cardiac dilation or cardia bifida. (A–A’) Wildtype third instar dorsal vessel in cross-sectional (A) and coronal view (A’). Actin (red) forms regular transverse myofibrils along the length of the heart tube. Abluminal Prc networks (cyan) envelop the heart tube and pericardial cells (PCs); (B–B’) Dorsal vessel of a third instar UAS-TalinRNAi/HandGal4 larva in which Talin expression has been inhibited via RNA interference in cardiomyocytes and PCs during late embryogenesis and throughout larval growth. (B) Cross-sectional view illustrating dilation of the cardiac lumen. Actin myofibrils do not fully envelop the heart tube, and appear constrained to the lateral regions of the vessel (arrowhead) (B’) Actin myofibrils are fewer in number and reduced in length (arrowhead), and Prc bundles are more broadly distributed; (C–C’) Homozygous third instar mmp2phenotypic null mutants show cardia bifida. (C) Cross-sectional view reveals two discrete heart vessels. The Prc network envelops the abluminal domains of both vessels. (C’) Portions of the mmp2 mutant heart chamber are split, while other regions show successful contralateral contact between cardioblasts to enclose a singular lumen. A small number of Prc bundles connect the two discrete heart vessels (arrow). The Actin cytoskeleton appears disorganised; myofibrils envelop the heart vessels but gaps are visible between parallel fibres (arrowhead). L: heart lumen; PC: pericardial cell.