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      Lymphoangiocrine signals promote cardiac growth and repair

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          Abstract

          <p class="first" id="P3">Recent studies suggested a beneficial role of lymphatics in restoring heart function after cardiac injury <sup> <a class="xref-link" href="#R1">1</a>– <a class="xref-link" href="#R6">6</a> </sup>. Here we report that in mice lymphatics promote cardiac growth, repair and cardio-protection. We show that a lymphoangiocrine signal produced by lymphatic endothelial cells (LECs) controls cardiomyocyte (CM) proliferation and survival during heart development, improves neonatal cardiac regeneration and is cardioprotective after myocardial infarction (MI). Embryos devoid of LECs develop smaller hearts as a consequence of reduced CM proliferation and increased CM apoptosis. Culturing primary mouse CMs in LEC-conditioned media increases CM proliferation and survival, indicating that LECs produce lymphoangiocrine signals controlling CM homeostasis. Characterization of the LEC secretome identified Reelin as a key player responsible for such function. Moreover, we report that LEC-specific <i>Reln</i>-null embryos also develop smaller hearts, that Reelin is required for efficient heart repair and function following neonatal MI, and that cardiac delivery of REELIN using collagen patches improves adult heart function after MI through a cardioprotective effect. These results identify a lymphoangiocrine role of LECs during cardiac development and injury response, and Reelin as an important mediator of this function. </p>

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          Transient regenerative potential of the neonatal mouse heart.

          Certain fish and amphibians retain a robust capacity for cardiac regeneration throughout life, but the same is not true of the adult mammalian heart. Whether the capacity for cardiac regeneration is absent in mammals or whether it exists and is switched off early after birth has been unclear. We found that the hearts of 1-day-old neonatal mice can regenerate after partial surgical resection, but this capacity is lost by 7 days of age. This regenerative response in 1-day-old mice was characterized by cardiomyocyte proliferation with minimal hypertrophy or fibrosis, thereby distinguishing it from repair processes. Genetic fate mapping indicated that the majority of cardiomyocytes within the regenerated tissue originated from preexisting cardiomyocytes. Echocardiography performed 2 months after surgery revealed that the regenerated ventricular apex had normal systolic function. Thus, for a brief period after birth, the mammalian heart appears to have the capacity to regenerate.
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            Chemically Defined and Small Molecule-Based Generation of Human Cardiomyocytes

            Existing methodologies for human induced pluripotent stem cell (hiPSC) cardiac differentiation are efficient but require the use of complex, undefined medium constituents that hinder further elucidation of the molecular mechanisms of cardiomyogenesis. Using hiPSCs derived under chemically defined conditions on synthetic matrices, we systematically developed a highly optimized cardiac differentiation strategy, employing a chemically defined medium consisting of just three components: the basal medium RPMI 1640, L-ascorbic acid 2-phosphate, and rice-derived recombinant human albumin. Along with small molecule-based differentiation induction, this protocol produced contractile sheets of up to 95% TNNT2+ cardiomyocytes at a yield of up to 100 cardiomyocytes for every input pluripotent cell, and was effective in 11 hiPSC lines tested. This is the first fully chemically defined platform for cardiac specification of hiPSCs, and allows the elucidation of cardiomyocyte macromolecular and metabolic requirements whilst providing a minimally complex system for the study of maturation and subtype specification.
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              A protein related to extracellular matrix proteins deleted in the mouse mutant reeler.

              The autosomal recessive mouse mutation reeler leads to impaired motor coordination, tremors and ataxia. Neurons in affected mice fail to reach their correct locations in the developing brain, disrupting the organization of the cerebellar and cerebral cortices and other laminated regions. Here we use a previously characterized reeler allele (rl(tg)) to close a gene, reelin, deleted in two reeler alleles. Normal but not mutant mice express reelin in embryonic and postnatal neurons during periods of neuronal migration. The encoded protein resembles extracellular matrix proteins involved in cell adhesion. The reeler phenotype thus seems to reflect a failure of early events associated with brain lamination which are normally controlled by reelin.
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                Journal
                Nature
                Nature
                Springer Science and Business Media LLC
                0028-0836
                1476-4687
                December 09 2020
                Article
                10.1038/s41586-020-2998-x
                e3229c0f-73f7-4e59-9079-084c590257c5
                © 2020

                http://www.springer.com/tdm

                http://www.springer.com/tdm

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