The heart tube forms and elongates through dynamic cell rearrangement coordinated with foregut extension

Author:

Kidokoro Hinako123,Yonei-Tamura Sayuri2,Tamura Koji2,Schoenwolf Gary C.1,Saijoh Yukio1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurobiology and Anatomy, University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, Utah 84132-3401, USA

2. Department of Developmental Biology and Neurosciences, Graduate School of Life Sciences, Tohoku University, Sendai, 980-8578, Japan

3. Department of Cell Biology, National Cerebral and Cardiovascular Center Research Institute, Fujishirodai 5-7-1, Suita, Osaka 565-8565, Japan

Abstract

In the initiation of cardiogenesis, the heart primordia transform from bilateral, flat sheets of mesoderm into an elongated, midline tube. Here, we discover that this rapid architectural change is driven by actomyosin-based oriented cell rearrangement and resulting dynamic tissue reshaping (convergent extension: CE). By labeling clusters of cells spanning the entire heart primordia, we show that the heart primordia converge toward the midline to form a narrow tube, while extending perpendicularly to rapidly lengthen it. Our data for the first time visualized the process of early heart tube formation from both the medial (second) and lateral (first) heart fields, revealing that both fields form the early heart tube by essentially the same mechanism. Additionally, the adjacent endoderm coordinately forms the foregut through previously unrecognized movements that parallel those of the heart mesoderm, and elongates by CE. In conclusion, our data illustrate how initially two-dimensional flat primordia rapidly change their shapes and construct the three-dimensional morphology of emerging organs in coordination with neighboring morphogenesis.

Funder

March of Dimes Foundation

Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development

National Heart Lung and Blood Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Subject

Developmental Biology,Molecular Biology

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