Multi-species meta-analysis identifies transcriptional signatures associated with cardiac endothelial responses in the ischaemic heart

Author:

Li Ziwen1ORCID,Solomonidis Emmanouil G1ORCID,Berkeley Bronwyn1,Tang Michelle Nga Huen1,Stewart Katherine Ross1ORCID,Perez-Vicencio Daniel1,McCracken Ian R1,Spiroski Ana-Mishel1,Gray Gillian A1,Barton Anna K1,Sellers Stephanie L2,Riley Paul R3,Baker Andrew H1,Brittan Mairi1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Cardiovascular Science, The Queen’s Medical Research Institute, University of Edinburgh , Edinburgh EH16 4TJ , UK

2. Division of Cardiology, Centre for Heart Lung Innovation, Providence Research, University of British Columbia , Vancouver , Canada

3. Department of Physiology, Anatomy and Genetics, University of Oxford , South Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3PT , UK

Abstract

Abstract Aim Myocardial infarction remains the leading cause of heart failure. The adult human heart lacks the capacity to undergo endogenous regeneration. New blood vessel growth is integral to regenerative medicine necessitating a comprehensive understanding of the pathways that regulate vascular regeneration. We sought to define the transcriptomic dynamics of coronary endothelial cells following ischaemic injuries in the developing and adult mouse and human heart and to identify new mechanistic insights and targets for cardiovascular regeneration. Methods and results We carried out a comprehensive meta-analysis of integrated single-cell RNA-sequencing data of coronary vascular endothelial cells from the developing and adult mouse and human heart spanning healthy and acute and chronic ischaemic cardiac disease. We identified species-conserved gene regulatory pathways aligned to endogenous neovascularization. We annotated injury-associated temporal shifts of the endothelial transcriptome and validated four genes: VEGF-C, KLF4, EGR1, and ZFP36. Moreover, we showed that ZFP36 regulates human coronary endothelial cell proliferation and defined that VEGF-C administration in vivo enhances clonal expansion of the cardiac vasculature post-myocardial infarction. Finally, we constructed a coronary endothelial cell meta-atlas, CrescENDO, to empower future in-depth research to target pathways associated with coronary neovascularization. Conclusion We present a high-resolution single-cell meta-atlas of healthy and injured coronary endothelial cells in the mouse and human heart, revealing a suite of novel targets with great potential to promote vascular regeneration, and providing a rich resource for therapeutic development.

Funder

British Heart Foundation

British Heart Foundation Chair of Translational Cardiovascular Sciences

BHF Programme

Centre for Regenerative Medicine

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Physiology

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