| Literature DB >> 31126344 |
Wenyu Hu1, Yanguo Xin1,2, Jian Hu1, Yingxian Sun1, Yinan Zhao3.
Abstract
Id proteins, inhibitors of DNA binding, are transcription regulators containing a highly conserved helix-loop-helix domain. During multiple stages of normal cardiogenesis, Id proteins play major roles in early development and participate in the differentiation and proliferation of cardiac progenitor cells and mature cardiomyocytes. The fact that a depletion of Ids can cause a variety of defects in cardiac structure and conduction function is further evidence of their involvement in heart development. Multiple signalling pathways and growth factors are involved in the regulation of Ids in a cell- and tissue- specific manner to affect heart development. Recent studies have demonstrated that Ids are related to multiple aspects of cardiovascular diseases, including congenital structural, coronary heart disease, and arrhythmia. Although a growing body of research has elucidated the important role of Ids, no comprehensive review has previously compiled these scattered findings. Here, we introduce and summarize the roles of Id proteins in heart development, with the hope that this overview of key findings might shed light on the molecular basis of consequential cardiovascular diseases. Furthermore, we described the future prospective researches needed to enable advancement in the maintainance of the proliferative capacity of cardiomyocytes. Additionally, research focusing on increasing embryonic stem cell culture adaptability will help to improve the future therapeutic application of cardiac regeneration.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiac conduction system; Heart development; Id; Inhibitor of DNA binding
Year: 2019 PMID: 31126344 PMCID: PMC6534900 DOI: 10.1186/s12964-019-0365-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Commun Signal ISSN: 1478-811X Impact factor: 5.712
Fig. 1A schematic representation of Id proteins is shown. a, The lack of the ‘basic’ DNA-binding domain makes it impossible for HLH/bHLH heterodimers to bind to DNA directly. b, The black box represents the helix-loop-helix domain, which is important for Id dimerisation with other E proteins
Developmental phenotypes of Id-knockout animal model
| Model | Species | Cardiac Phenotype | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chick and mouse | Decreased endocardial epithelial-to-mesenchymal transformation | 50 | |
|
| Mouse | Atrioventricular septal defects and membranous ventricular septal defects in | 54, 55 |
|
| Zebrafish | Retrograde blood flow at the atrioventricular canal, indicating defects in atrioventricular valve function | 61 |
|
| Mouse | Ventricular septal defects, impaired ventricular trabeculation, thinning of the compact myocardium, and outflow tract atresia at E11.5 to E13.5 | 46 |
|
| Mouse | Reduced heart size by 40 to 60%, defects in auriculoventricular dissociation and thinner ventricular compact layer from E9.5 | 46 |
|
| Mouse | Heart tube-forming region missed at cardiac crescent stages | 45 |
| Mouse | Fibrotic vasculature, cardiac enlargement, ventricular septal defects and decreased cardiac function | 70 |
E embryonic day, Id inhibitor of DNA binding, siRNA small interfering RNA, Tie2 TEK receptor tyrosine kinase
Fig. 2The evidence to date of the differing regulation of Ids in epicardium (a), ventricular conduction system myocytes (b), cardiomyocytes (c), P19 cells (d), endocardium (e) and ES cells (f) is shown
Developmental function and regulation of Ids in different cell lineage in vitro
| Cell type | Treatment | Function | Regulation | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| P19CL6 cell | Id1/Id1 siRNA transfection | Promote/inhibit differentiation toward cardiomyocyte and cell proliferation | Up−/down- regulate Gata4, α-MHC, and Isl1 | 53 |
| mESC | Id1 siRNA transfection | Inhibit cardiogenic mesoderm differentiation | Downregulate Kdr, Mesp1, Snai1, and Cdh11 | 45 |
| mESC or hESC | Id1 transfection | Direct ESCs to differentiate toward the cardiogenic mesoderm | Upregulate Evx1, Grrp1, Mesp1, and Kdr, inhibit Tcf3 and Foxa2 expression | 45 |
| P19 cell | Id3 transfection | Inhibit cardiomyocyte differentiation | Inhibite the Expression of the Gata4, Nkx2.5, and MHC, such inhibition can be rescued by p204 protein | 66 |
| P19 cell | Crossveinless-2 | Promote cardiomyocyte differentiation | Inhibit Smad1/5/8 activation and Id1 expression, enhance expression of T, Mesp1, Nkx2.5 and Tbx5 | 65 |
α-MHC, α-myosin heavy chain; Cdh11, cadherin 11; Evx1, even-skipped homeobox 1; Foxa2, forkhead box A2; GATA4, GATA binding protein 4; Grrp1, glycine/arginine rich protein 1; Kdr, kinase insert domain receptor; Isl1, ISL LIM homeobox 1; m/hESC, mouse/human embryonic stem cell; Mesp1, mesoderm posterior bHLH transcription factor 1; Nkx2.5, NK2 homeobox 5; Smad1/5/8, SMAD family member 1/5/8; siRNA, small interfering RNA; Snai1, snail family transcriptional repressor 1; T, T-box transcription factor T or brachyury; Tbx5, T-box transcription factor 5; Tcf3, transcription factor 3
Fig. 3A summary of the regulation network of Ids in heart development is shown. In cardiogenesis, Ids play an important role by regulating the transcription and expression of a variety of key cardiac factors and these regulatory functions are regulated by various signalling pathways and transcription factors. As direct downstream targets of the BMP-Smad signalling pathway, Ids are also regulated by Wnt and IGF signalling pathways. Tbx5 and Nkx2.5, two cardiac transcription factors, also regulate Id to mediate the specification of ventricular myocytes into the ventricular conduction system lineage