학술논문

Late developing cardiac lymphatic vasculature supports adult zebrafish heart function and regeneration.
Document Type
article
Source
Subject
Myocardium
Coronary Vessels
Heart
Lymphatic Vessels
Animals
Animals
Genetically Modified
Zebrafish
Humans
Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor Receptor-3
Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor C
Zebrafish Proteins
Receptors
CXCR4
Regeneration
Gene Expression Regulation
Developmental
Lymphangiogenesis
Mutation
cardiac lymphatics
cryoinjury
developmental biology
regeneration
regenerative medicine
revascularization
stem cells
zebrafish
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Language
Abstract
The cardiac lymphatic vascular system and its potentially critical functions in heart patients have been largely underappreciated, in part due to a lack of experimentally accessible systems. We here demonstrate that cardiac lymphatic vessels develop in young adult zebrafish, using coronary arteries to guide their expansion down the ventricle. Mechanistically, we show that in cxcr4a mutants with defective coronary artery development, cardiac lymphatic vessels fail to expand onto the ventricle. In regenerating adult zebrafish hearts the lymphatic vasculature undergoes extensive lymphangiogenesis in response to a cryoinjury. A significant defect in reducing the scar size after cryoinjury is observed in zebrafish with impaired Vegfc/Vegfr3 signaling that fail to develop intact cardiac lymphatic vessels. These results suggest that the cardiac lymphatic system can influence the regenerative potential of the myocardium.