Conserved chamber-specific polyploidy maintains heart function in Drosophila

Author:

Chakraborty Archan12,Peterson Nora G.1ORCID,King Juliet S.1,Gross Ryan T.3,Pla Michelle Mendiola3,Thennavan Aatish4,Zhou Kevin C.5ORCID,DeLuca Sophia6,Bursac Nenad26,Bowles Dawn E.3,Wolf Matthew J.78,Fox Donald T.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Duke University School of Medicine 1 Department of Pharmacology & Cancer Biology , , Durham, NC 27710, USA

2. Duke Regeneration Center, Duke University School of Medicine 2 , Durham, NC 27710, USA

3. Duke University 3 Department of Surgery , , Durham, NC 27710, USA

4. UT MD Anderson Cancer Center 4 Department of Systems Biology , , Houston, TX 77230, USA

5. University of California 5 Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences , , Berkeley, CA 94720, USA

6. Duke University 6 Department of Biomedical Engineering , , Durham, NC 27710, USA

7. University of Virginia 7 Department of Medicine , , Charlottesville, VA 22903, USA

8. Robert M. Berne Cardiovascular Research Center, University of Virginia 8 , Charlottesville, VA 22903, USA

Abstract

ABSTRACT Developmentally programmed polyploidy (whole-genome duplication) of cardiomyocytes is common across evolution. Functions of such polyploidy are essentially unknown. Here, in both Drosophila larvae and human organ donors, we reveal distinct polyploidy levels in cardiac organ chambers. In Drosophila, differential growth and cell cycle signal sensitivity leads the heart chamber to reach a higher ploidy/cell size relative to the aorta chamber. Cardiac ploidy-reduced animals exhibit reduced heart chamber size, stroke volume and cardiac output, and acceleration of circulating hemocytes. These Drosophila phenotypes mimic human cardiomyopathies. Our results identify productive and likely conserved roles for polyploidy in cardiac chambers and suggest that precise ploidy levels sculpt many developing tissues. These findings of productive cardiomyocyte polyploidy impact efforts to block developmental polyploidy to improve heart injury recovery.

Funder

American Heart Association

Duke University

National Institutes of Health

National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute

National Institute of General Medical Sciences

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Subject

Developmental Biology,Molecular Biology

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1. Insights and perspectives on the enigmatic alary muscles of arthropods;Frontiers in Cell and Developmental Biology;2024-01-15

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