Hedgehog signaling controls a gene regulatory network necessary for directing early cardiovasculogenesis

NIH RePORTER · NIH · F30 · $48,410 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

ABSTRACT Congenital heart disease (CHD) is the most common birth defect—occurring in as many as 3 in every 100 live births. Despite its frequency, the genetic etiologies of CHD remain elusive due to prevalent contribution of noncoding variation and genetic modifiers. As a lab we attempt to distill this complexity though understanding the underlying gene regulatory networks involved in CHD. In this study, we uncover a gene regulatory network essential for the proper development of cardiovascular lineages downstream of the hedgehog (hh) signaling, a master regulator of cell fate determination. Our previous work has shown that Hedgehog signaling is required for second heart field-derived cardiac structures. Using Genetic Inducible Fate Mapping, we observed that late labeling of cardiac progenitors (E8.5 and later) labeled only second heart field structures while early labeling of cardiac progenitors (E6.5) additionally labeled first heart field derived structures. Germline removal of all hh signaling, through ablation of a key membrane-bound receptor, smoothened (smo), caused hypoplasia of the linear heart tube, a failure of chamber expansion, and early embryonic lethality. Conditional smo removal using Mesp1-Cre recapitulated the germline phenotype whereas smo removal using Nxk2-5-Cre supported chamber formation, restricting the requirement for hh signaling to early mesoderm. RNA-seq of Mesp1+ cells overexpressing Gli3R, the primary hh-signaling transcriptional repressor revealed upregulation of lineage- determining transcriptional programs for differentiating cardiovascular lineages at embryonic day 7.5 but down- regulation of factors involved with maintenance of progenitor identity. We hypothesize that hedgehog signaling controls a gene regulatory network required for the proper establishment of cardiovascular lineages by controlling the differentiation timing of mesodermal progenitors. As a means to accomplish this, we propose to 1) Validate and study the developmental mechanisms of transcriptional disruption of cell fate decisions in the cardiogenic mesoderm 2) Study the cellular and mechanistic basis for the severe hypoplastic cardiac defects caused by disruption in early hh singaling. These data will be integrated as a means to understand not only the mechanism by which hh controls early mesodermal patterning, but to contribute foundational knowledge towards the elucidation of CHD etiology by providing a novel mechanism for hypoplastic cardiac phenotypes.

Key facts

NIH application ID
10005442
Project number
5F30HL136200-04
Recipient
UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO
Principal Investigator
Alexander Guzzetta
Activity code
F30
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2020
Award amount
$48,410
Award type
5
Project period
2017-09-30 → 2021-09-29