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Published March 15, 2012 | public
Journal Article

Convective tissue movements play a major role in avian endocardial morphogenesis

Abstract

Endocardial cells play a critical role in cardiac development and function, forming the innermost layer of the early (tubular) heart, separated from the myocardium by extracellular matrix (ECM). However, knowledge is limited regarding the interactions of cardiac progenitors and surrounding ECM during dramatic tissue rearrangements and concomitant cellular repositioning events that underlie endocardial morphogenesis. By analyzing the movements of immunolabeled ECM components (fibronectin, fibrillin-2) and TIE1 positive endocardial progenitors in time-lapse recordings of quail embryonic development, we demonstrate that the transformation of the primary heart field within the anterior lateral plate mesoderm (LPM) into a tubular heart involves the precise co-movement of primordial endocardial cells with the surrounding ECM. Thus, the ECM of the tubular heart contains filaments that were associated with the anterior LPM at earlier developmental stages. Moreover, endocardial cells exhibit surprisingly little directed active motility, that is, sustained directed movements relative to the surrounding ECM microenvironment. These findings point to the importance of large-scale tissue movements that convect cells to the appropriate positions during cardiac organogenesis.

Additional Information

© 2012 Elsevier Inc. Received 1 July 2011. Revised 13 December 2011. Accepted 14 December 2011. Available online 4 January 2012. The authors would like to thank Dr. Charles Little for his insightful comments and for his assistance preparing the schematics. We also wish to thank Ms. Pat St John for her expert technical assistance in optimizing the conditions for cryosectioning avian embryonic hearts. This work was supported by NIH grants HL085694 (BJR); HL087136 (AC); the Hungarian Research Fund OTKA K72664 (AC); the G. Harold & Leila Y. Mathers Charitable Foundation (BJR, AC), a Faculty Scholar Award supported by P20 RR016475 from the NCRR (BJR) and a Biomedical Research Training Program award (AA).

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 24, 2023