Myc overexpression enhances epicardial contribution to the developing heart and promotes extensive expansion of the cardiomyocyte population
Myc is an essential regulator of cell growth and proliferation. Myc overexpression promotes the homeostatic expansion of cardiomyocyte populations by cell competition, however whether this applies to other cardiac lineages remains unknown. The epicardium contributes signals and cells to the developi...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Scientific reports 2016-10, Vol.6 (1), p.35366-35366, Article 35366 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Myc is an essential regulator of cell growth and proliferation. Myc overexpression promotes the homeostatic expansion of cardiomyocyte populations by cell competition, however whether this applies to other cardiac lineages remains unknown. The epicardium contributes signals and cells to the developing and adult injured heart and exploring strategies for modulating its activity is of great interest. Using inducible genetic mosaics, we overexpressed Myc in the epicardium and determined the differential expansion of Myc-overexpressing cells with respect to their wild type counterparts. Myc-overexpressing cells overcolonized all epicardial-derived lineages and showed increased ability to invade the myocardium and populate the vasculature. We also found massive colonization of the myocardium by
Wt1Cre
-derived Myc-overexpressing cells, with preservation of cardiac development. Detailed analyses showed that this contribution is unlikely to derive from Cre activity in early cardiomyocytes but does not either derive from established epicardial cells, suggesting that early precursors expressing
Wt1Cre
originate the recombined cardiomyocytes. Myc overexpression does not modify the initial distribution of
Wt1Cre
-recombined cardiomyocytes, indicating that it does not stimulate the incorporation of early expressing
Wt1Cre
lineages to the myocardium, but differentially expands this initial population. We propose that strategies using epicardial lineages for heart repair may benefit from promoting cell competitive ability. |
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ISSN: | 2045-2322 2045-2322 |
DOI: | 10.1038/srep35366 |