Endocardial identity is established during early somitogenesis by Bmp signalling acting upstream ofnpas4landetv2

Author:

Capon Samuel J.1ORCID,Uribe Veronica2ORCID,Dominado Nicole2ORCID,Ehrlich Ophelia2,Smith Kelly A.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Division of Genomics of Development and Disease, Institute for Molecular Bioscience, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland 4072, Australia

2. Department of Anatomy & Physiology, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria 3010, Australia

Abstract

ABSTRACTThe endocardium plays important roles in the development and function of the vertebrate heart; however, few molecular markers of this tissue have been identified and little is known about what regulates its differentiation. Here, we describe the Gt(SAGFF27C); Tg(4xUAS:egfp) line as a marker of endocardial development in zebrafish. Transcriptomic comparison between endocardium and pan-endothelium confirms molecular distinction between these populations and time-course analysis suggests differentiation as early as eight somites. To investigate what regulates endocardial identity, we employed npas4l, etv2 and scl loss-of-function models. Endocardial expression is lost in npas4l mutants, significantly reduced in etv2 mutants and only modestly affected upon scl loss-of-function. Bmp signalling was also examined: overactivation of Bmp signalling increased endocardial expression, whereas Bmp inhibition decreased expression. Finally, epistasis experiments showed that overactivation of Bmp signalling was incapable of restoring endocardial expression in etv2 mutants. By contrast, overexpression of either npas4l or etv2 was sufficient to rescue endocardial expression upon Bmp inhibition. Together, these results describe the differentiation of the endocardium, distinct from vasculature, and place npas4l and etv2 downstream of Bmp signalling in regulating its differentiation.

Funder

Australian Government

Australian Research Council

University of Queensland

University of Melbourne

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Subject

Developmental Biology,Molecular Biology

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