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Blood flow and Bmp signaling control endocardial chamber morphogenesis

Authors

  • A.C. Dietrich
  • V.A. Lombardo
  • J. Veerkamp
  • F. Priller
  • S. Abdelilah-Seyfried

Journal

  • Developmental Cell

Citation

  • Dev Cell 30 (4): 367-377

Abstract

  • During heart development, the onset of heartbeat and blood flow coincides with a ballooning of the cardiac chambers. Here, we have used the zebrafish as a vertebrate model to characterize chamber ballooning morphogenesis of the endocardium, a specialized population of endothelial cells that line the interior of the heart. By combining functional manipulations, fate mapping studies, and high-resolution imaging, we show that endocardial growth occurs without an influx of external cells. Instead, endocardial cell proliferation is regulated, both by blood flow and by Bmp signaling, in a manner independent of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) signaling. Similar to myocardial cells, endocardial cells obtain distinct chamber-specific and inner- versus outer-curvature-specific surface area sizes. We find that the hemodynamic-sensitive transcription factor Klf2a is involved in regulating endocardial cell morphology. These findings establish the endocardium as the flow-sensitive tissue in the heart with a key role in adapting chamber growth in response to the mechanical stimulus of blood flow.


DOI

doi:10.1016/j.devcel.2014.06.020