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Mechanisms involved in valvuloseptal endocardial cushion formation in early cardiogenesis: Roles of transforming growth factor (TGF)-β and bone morphogenetic protein (BMP)

✍ Scribed by Nakajima, Yuji ;Yamagishi, Toshiyuki ;Hokari, Shigeru ;Nakamura, Hiroaki


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2000
Tongue
English
Weight
208 KB
Volume
258
Category
Article
ISSN
0003-276X

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✦ Synopsis


Endothelial-mesenchymal transformation (EMT) is a critical event in the generation of the endocardial cushion, the primordia of the valves and septa of the adult heart. This embryonic phenomenon occurs in the outflow tract (OT) and atrioventricular (AV) canal of the embryonic heart in a spatiotemporally restricted manner, and is initiated by putative myocardially derived inductive signals (adherons) which are transferred to the endocardium across the cardiac jelly. Abnormal development of endocardial cushion tissue is linked to many congenital heart diseases. At the onset of EMT in chick cardiogenesis, transforming growth factor (TGF␤)-3 is expressed in transforming endothelial and invading mesenchymal cells, while bone morphogenetic protein (BMP)-2 is expressed in the subjacent myocardium. Three-dimensional collagen gel culture experiments of the AV endocardium show that 1) myocardially derived inductive signals upregulate the expression of AV endothelial TGF␤3 at the onset of EMT, 2) TGF␤3 needs to be expressed by these endothelial cells to trigger the initial phenotypic changes of EMT, and 3) myocardial BMP2 acts synergistically with TGF␤3 in the initiation of EMT.