Spatial transcriptomics reveals novel genes during the remodelling of the embryonic human arterial valves

Author:

Queen Rachel,Crosier Moira,Eley Lorraine,Kerwin Janet,Turner Jasmin E.,Yu JianshiORCID,Alqahtani Ahlam,Dhanaseelan Tamilvendhan,Overman Lynne,Soetjoadi Hannah,Baldock Richard,Coxhead Jonathan,Boczonadi Veronika,Laude AlexORCID,Cockell Simon J.ORCID,Kane Maureen A.,Lisgo StevenORCID,Henderson Deborah J.ORCID

Abstract

Abnormalities of the arterial valves, including bicuspid aortic valve (BAV) are amongst the most common congenital defects and are a significant cause of morbidity as well as predisposition to disease in later life. Despite this, and compounded by their small size and relative inaccessibility, there is still much to understand about how the arterial valves form and remodel during embryogenesis, both at the morphological and genetic level. Here we set out to address this in human embryos, using Spatial Transcriptomics (ST). We show that ST can be used to investigate the transcriptome of the developing arterial valves, circumventing the problems of accurately dissecting out these tiny structures from the developing embryo. We show that the transcriptome of CS16 and CS19 arterial valves overlap considerably, despite being several days apart in terms of human gestation, and that expression data confirm that the great majority of the most differentially expressed genes are valve-specific. Moreover, we show that the transcriptome of the human arterial valves overlaps with that of mouse atrioventricular valves from a range of gestations, validating our dataset but also highlighting novel genes, including four that are not found in the mouse genome and have not previously been linked to valve development. Importantly, our data suggests that valve transcriptomes are under-represented when using commonly used databases to filter for genes important in cardiac development; this means that causative variants in valve-related genes may be excluded during filtering for genomic data analyses for, for example, BAV. Finally, we highlight “novel” pathways that likely play important roles in arterial valve development, showing that mouse knockouts of RBP1 have arterial valve defects. Thus, this study has confirmed the utility of ST for studies of the developing heart valves and broadens our knowledge of the genes and signalling pathways important in human valve development.

Funder

Bristish Heart Foundation

Medical Research Council

Wellcome

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Subject

Cancer Research,Genetics (clinical),Genetics,Molecular Biology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference75 articles.

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