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Recapitulation of developmental mechanisms to revascularize the ischemic heart
Karina N. Dubé, Tonia M. Thomas, Sonali Munshaw, Mala Rohling, Paul R. Riley, Nicola Smart
Karina N. Dubé, Tonia M. Thomas, Sonali Munshaw, Mala Rohling, Paul R. Riley, Nicola Smart
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Research Article Cardiology

Recapitulation of developmental mechanisms to revascularize the ischemic heart

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Abstract

Restoring blood flow after myocardial infarction (MI) is essential for survival of existing and newly regenerated tissue. Endogenous vascular repair processes are deployed following injury but are poorly understood. We sought to determine whether developmental mechanisms of coronary vessel formation are intrinsically reactivated in the adult mouse after MI. Using pulse-chase genetic lineage tracing, we establish that de novo vessel formation constitutes a substantial component of the neovascular response, with apparent cellular contributions from the endocardium and coronary sinus. The adult heart reverts to its former hypertrabeculated state and repeats the process of compaction, which may facilitate endocardium-derived neovascularization. The capacity for angiogenic sprouting of the coronary sinus vein, the adult derivative of the sinus venosus, may also reflect its embryonic origin. The quiescent epicardium is reactivated and, while direct cellular contribution to new vessels is minimal, it supports the directional expansion of the neovessel network toward the infarcted myocardium. Thymosin β4, a peptide with roles in vascular development, was required for endocardial compaction, epicardial vessel expansion, and smooth muscle cell recruitment. Insight into pathways that regulate endogenous vascular repair, drawing on comparisons with development, may reveal novel targets for therapeutically enhancing neovascularization.

Authors

Karina N. Dubé, Tonia M. Thomas, Sonali Munshaw, Mala Rohling, Paul R. Riley, Nicola Smart

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Figure 1

The endogenous neovascular response after myocardial infarction.

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The endogenous neovascular response after myocardial infarction.
Immunos...
Immunostained transverse heart sections reveal considerable expansion of the capillary network by day 7 after infarction (B; compared with sham, A). Note the robust upregulation of Emcn, particularly in the endocardium, and the de novo capillary network that forms within the expanded epicardium (dotted line indicates epicardial-myocardial boundary; solid line indicates infarcted myocardium; representative of n = 15 day 7 MI hearts and n = 4 day 7 sham hearts). Scale bar: 200 μm (A and B). By qRT-PCR, upregulation of endothelial genes, exemplified by Pecam1, precedes induction of smooth muscle genes, Acta2 and Sm22α (C) (mean ± SEM; n = 4 hearts per time point). Two-tailed Kruskal-Wallis nonparametric test with Dunn’s post-hoc test for multiple comparisons; *P ≤ 0.05, **P ≤ 0.01.

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