Dedifferentiation and Proliferation of Artery Endothelial Cells Drive Coronary Collateral Development in Mice

Author:

Arolkar Gauri1,Kumar Sneha K.1,Wang Hanjay2,Gonzalez Karen M.34ORCID,Kumar Suraj1ORCID,Bishnoi Bhavnesh1,Rios Coronado Pamela E.5,Woo Y. Joseph2ORCID,Red-Horse Kristy346ORCID,Das Soumyashree1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. National Centre for Biological Sciences, Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, Bengaluru, India (G.A., S.K.K., S.K., B.B., S.D.).

2. Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery (H.W., Y.J.W.), Stanford University School of Medicine, CA.

3. Institute for Stem Cell Biology and Regenerative Medicine (K.M.G., K.R.-H.), Stanford University School of Medicine, CA.

4. Department of Biology (K.M.G., K.R.-H.), Stanford University, CA.

5. Department of Bioengineering (P.E.R.C.), Stanford University, CA.

6. Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Chevy Chase, MD (K.R.-H.).

Abstract

Background: Collateral arteries act as natural bypasses which reroute blood flow to ischemic regions and facilitate tissue regeneration. In an injured heart, neonatal artery endothelial cells orchestrate a systematic series of cellular events, which includes their outward migration, proliferation, and coalescence into fully functional collateral arteries. This process, called artery reassembly, aids complete cardiac regeneration in neonatal hearts but is absent in adults. The reason for this age-dependent disparity in artery cell response is completely unknown. In this study, we investigated if regenerative potential of coronary arteries is dictated by their ability to dedifferentiate. Methods: Single-cell RNA sequencing of coronary endothelial cells was performed to identify differences in molecular profiles of neonatal and adult endothelial cells in mice. Findings from this in silico analyses were confirmed with in vivo experiments using genetic lineage tracing, whole organ immunostaining, confocal imaging, and cardiac functional assays in mice. Results: Upon coronary occlusion, neonates showed a significant increase in actively cycling artery cells and expressed prominent dedifferentiation markers. Data from in silico pathway analyses and in vivo experiments suggested that upon myocardial infarction, cell cycle reentry of preexisting neonatal artery cells, the subsequent collateral artery formation, and recovery of cardiac function are dependent on arterial VegfR2 (vascular endothelial growth factor receptor-2). This subpopulation of dedifferentiated and proliferating artery cells was absent in nonregenerative postnatal day 7 or adult hearts. Conclusions: These data indicate that adult artery endothelial cells fail to drive collateral artery development due to their limited ability to dedifferentiate and proliferate.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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