Cardiac progenitors instruct second heart field fate through Wnts

Author:

Miyamoto Matthew1,Kannan Suraj1,Anderson Matthew J.2ORCID,Liu Xihe1ORCID,Suh David1ORCID,Htet Myo1ORCID,Li Biyi1ORCID,Kakani Tejasvi1,Murphy Sean1ORCID,Tampakakis Emmanouil1,Lewandoski Mark2ORCID,Andersen Peter1ORCID,Uosaki Hideki13ORCID,Kwon Chulan1

Affiliation:

1. Division of Cardiology, Department of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, 21205

2. Genetics of Vertebrate Development Section, Cancer and Developmental Biology Laboratory, National Cancer Institute, NIH, Frederick, MD, 21702

3. Division of Regenerative Medicine, Jichi Medical University, 3311-1 Yakushiji, Shimotsuke, Tochigi 329-0498, Japan

Abstract

The heart develops in a synchronized sequence of proliferation and differentiation of cardiac progenitor cells (CPCs) from two anatomically distinct pools of cells, the first heart field (FHF) and second heart field (SHF). Congenital heart defects arise upon dysregulation of these processes, many of which are restricted to derivatives of the FHF or SHF. Of the conserved set of signaling pathways that regulate development, the Wnt signaling pathway has long been known for its importance in SHF development. The source of such Wnts has remained elusive, though it has been postulated that these Wnts are secreted from ectodermal or endodermal sources. The central question remains unanswered: Where do these Wnts come from? Here, we show that CPCs autoregulate SHF development via Wnt through genetic manipulation of a key Wnt export protein (Wls), scRNA-seq analysis of CPCs, and use of our precardiac organoid system. Through this, we identify dysregulated developmental trajectories of anterior SHF cell fate, leading to a striking single ventricle phenotype in knockout embryos. We then applied our findings to our precardiac organoid model and found that Wnt2 is sufficient to restore SHF cell fate in our model of disrupted endogenous Wnt signaling. In this study, we provide a basis for SHF cell fate decision—proliferation vs. differentiation—autoregulated by CPCs through Wnt.

Funder

HHS | NIH | National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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