Spatiotemporal signaling underlies progressive vascular rarefaction in myocardial infarction

Therapeutic angiogenesis represents a promising avenue to revascularize the ischemic heart. Its limited success is partly due to our poor understanding of the cardiac stroma, specifically mural cells, and their response to ischemic injury. Here, we combine single-cell and positional transcriptomics...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2023-12, Vol.14 (1), p.8498-8498, Article 8498
Hauptverfasser: Tung, Lin Wei, Groppa, Elena, Soliman, Hesham, Lin, Bruce, Chang, Chihkai, Cheung, Chun Wai, Ritso, Morten, Guo, David, Rempel, Lucas, Sinha, Sarthak, Eisner, Christine, Brassard, Julyanne, McNagny, Kelly, Biernaskie, Jeff, Rossi, Fabio
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Therapeutic angiogenesis represents a promising avenue to revascularize the ischemic heart. Its limited success is partly due to our poor understanding of the cardiac stroma, specifically mural cells, and their response to ischemic injury. Here, we combine single-cell and positional transcriptomics to assess the behavior of mural cells within the healing heart. In response to myocardial infarction, mural cells adopt an altered state closely associated with the infarct and retain a distinct lineage from fibroblasts. This response is concurrent with vascular rarefaction and reduced vascular coverage by mural cells. Positional transcriptomics reveals that the infarcted heart is governed by regional-dependent and temporally regulated programs. While the remote zone acts as an important source of pro-angiogenic signals, the infarct zone is accentuated by chronic activation of anti-angiogenic, pro-fibrotic, and inflammatory cues. Together, our work unveils the spatiotemporal programs underlying cardiac repair and establishes an association between vascular deterioration and mural cell dysfunction. Enhancing vascularization to improve cardiac disease outcomes is a therapeutic approach with limited success. Here, the authors show that cardiac repair is governed by spatiotemporally regulated programs and underline the signaling mechanisms driving vascular deterioration.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-023-44227-6