Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
10934256 Developmental Biology 2005 13 Pages PDF
Abstract
The formation of the coronary vessel system is vital for heart development, an essential step of which is the establishment of a capillary plexus that displays a density gradient across the myocardial wall, being higher on the epicardial than the endocardial side. This gradient in capillary plexus formation develops concurrently with transmural gradients of myocardium-derived growth factors, including FGFs. To test the role of the FGF expression gradient in patterning the nascent capillary plexus, an ectopic FGF-over-expressing site was created in the ventricular myocardial wall in the quail embryo via retroviral infection from E2-2.5, thus abolishing the transmural gradient of FGFs. In FGF virus-infected regions of the ventricular myocardium, the capillary density across the transmural axis shifted away from that in control hearts at E7. This FGF-induced change in vessel patterning was more profound at E12, with the middle zone becoming the most vascularized. An up-regulation of FGFR-1 and VEGFR-2 in epicardial and subepicardial cells adjacent to FGF virus-infected myocardium was also detected, indicating a paracrine effect on induction of vascular signaling components in coronary precursors. These results suggest that correct transmural patterning of coronary vessels requires the correct transmural expression of FGF and, therefore, FGF may act as a template for coronary vessel patterning.
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