Is zebrafish heart regeneration "complete"?: Lineage-restricted cardiomyocytes proliferate to pre-injury numbers but some fail to differentiate in fibrotic hearts
Bertozzi, Alberto; Wu, Chi-Chung; Nguyen, Phong D; Vasudevarao, Mohankrishna Dalvoy; Mulaw, Medhanie A; Koopman, Charlotte D; de Boer, Teun P; Bakkers, Jeroen; Weidinger, Gilbert
(2021) Developmental Biology, volume 471, pp. 106 - 118
(Article)
Abstract
Adult zebrafish are frequently described to be able to "completely" regenerate the heart. Yet, the extent to which cardiomyocytes lost to injury are replaced is unknown, since existing evidence for cardiomyocyte proliferation is indirect or non-quantitative. We established stereological methods to quantify the number of cardiomyocytes at several time-points post
... read more
cryoinjury. Intriguingly, after cryoinjuries that killed about 1/3 of the ventricular cardiomyocytes, pre-injury cardiomyocyte numbers were restored already within 30 days. Yet, many hearts retained small residual scars, and a subset of cardiomyocytes bordering these fibrotic areas remained smaller, lacked differentiated sarcomeric structures, and displayed defective calcium signaling. Thus, a subset of regenerated cardiomyocytes failed to fully mature. While lineage-tracing experiments have shown that regenerating cardiomyocytes are derived from differentiated cardiomyocytes, technical limitations have previously made it impossible to test whether cardiomyocyte trans-differentiation contributes to regeneration of non-myocyte cell lineages. Using Cre responder lines that are expressed in all major cell types of the heart, we found no evidence for cardiomyocyte transdifferentiation into endothelial, epicardial, fibroblast or immune cell lineages. Overall, our results imply a refined answer to the question whether zebrafish can completely regenerate the heart: in response to cryoinjury, preinjury cardiomyocyte numbers are indeed completely regenerated by proliferation of lineage-restricted cardiomyocytes, while restoration of cardiomyocyte differentiation and function, as well as resorption of scar tissue, is less robustly achieved.
show less
Download/Full Text
Keywords: Cardiomyocyte, Cryoinjury, Fibrosis, Heart, Lineage, Potency, Proliferation, Regeneration, Scar, Stereology, Zebrafish, Molecular Biology, Cell Biology, Developmental Biology, Journal Article
ISSN: 0012-1606
Publisher: Academic Press Inc.
Note: Funding Information: The Weidinger group was funded by a “Klaus-Georg und Sigrid Hengstberger-Forschungsstipendium” by the German Cardiac Society , by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft ( SFB 1149 , project number 251293561 ; SFB 1279 , project number 316249678 ; WE 4223/6-1 , project number 414077062 ; WE 4223/8-1 , project number 433187294 ) and by the German ministry of science BMBF (EU ERA-CVD “Cardio-Pro”, grant number 01KL1704 ). P.D.N is supported by an EMBO Long Term Fellowship ALTF1129-2015 , HFSPO Fellowship ( LT001404/2017-L ) and a NWO-ZonMW Veni grant (016.186.017–3). Publisher Copyright: © 2020 Elsevier Inc. Copyright: Copyright 2021 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
(Peer reviewed)