| Literature DB >> 30544906 |
Cristina E Fernandez1,2, Melanie Bakovic3, Ravi Karra4,5.
Abstract
Studies over the past two decades have shown heart regeneration in zebrafish to be a dynamic process, choreographed by multiple cell types. In particular, recent work has identified revascularization of the wound to be a sentinel event during heart regeneration. The cardiac endothelium has emerged as a key orchestrator of heart regeneration, influencing cardiomyocyte hyperplasia and tissue morphogenesis. Here, we review how the coronary vasculature regenerates after injury, how signaling pathways link the cardiac endothelium to heart regeneration, and how understanding these signaling dynamics can lead to targeted therapies for heart regeneration.Entities:
Keywords: cardiac regeneration; endothelium; vascular
Year: 2018 PMID: 30544906 PMCID: PMC6306804 DOI: 10.3390/jcdd5040056
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cardiovasc Dev Dis ISSN: 2308-3425
Figure 1Cellular dynamics during zebrafish heart regeneration. Immediately after injury, fast revascularization of the wound occurs by sprouting of rudimentary vasculature into the wound. Shortly thereafter, the cardiac endothelium (orange) and epicardium (blue) proliferate and invade the injured area. Epicardial cells undergo EMT and support revascularization. Subsequently, cardiomyocyte (red) proliferation occurs leading to newly formed myocardium. Selected modifiers of regenerative responses are provided for each stage of regeneration, color coded by the likely cellular source.
Key Pathways Affecting Endothelial Signaling in Zebrafish. FGF, fibroblast growth factor; CM, cardiomyocyte; DN-MAML, dominant-negative isoform of the murine mastermind-like protein; NICD, notch1a-intracellular domain; PDGF, platelet-derived growth factor; RA, retinoic acid; EMT, epithelial to mesenchymal transition.
| Pathway | Factors Induced after Injury | Functional Evidence during Heart Regeneration | Refs. |
|---|---|---|---|
| FGF | Epicardium: | Global expression of | [ |
| Notch | Endocardium: | Notch inhibition by a γ-secretase inhibitor impairs CM proliferation, endocardial maturation, and regeneration. | [ |
| Notch inhibition by global expression of DN-MAML impairs CM proliferation and regeneration. | [ | ||
| Notch activation by global expression of NICD impairs regeneration. NICD overexpression increases CM proliferation after cryoinjury, but decreases CM proliferation after amputation. | [ | ||
| PDGF | Perivascular cells: | Pharmacologic inhibition of PDGF signaling impairs revascularization after amputation. | [ |
| RA | Epicardium and endocardium: | RA inhibition by global expression of | [ |
| VEGFA | Epicardium and endocardium: | VEGFA inhibition by global expression of | [ |