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Transdifferentiation of Fast Skeletal Muscle Into Functional Endothelium in Vivo by Transcription Factor Etv2

Etsrp/Etv2 (Etv2) is an evolutionarily conserved master regulator of vascular development in vertebrates. Etv2 deficiency prevents the proper specification of the endothelial cell lineage, while its overexpression causes expansion of the endothelial cell lineage in the early embryo or in embryonic s...

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Autores principales: Veldman, Matthew B., Zhao, Chengjian, Gomez, Gustavo A., Lindgren, Anne G., Huang, Haigen, Yang, Hanshuo, Yao, Shaohua, Martin, Benjamin L., Kimelman, David, Lin, Shuo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3708712/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23853546
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.1001590
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author Veldman, Matthew B.
Zhao, Chengjian
Gomez, Gustavo A.
Lindgren, Anne G.
Huang, Haigen
Yang, Hanshuo
Yao, Shaohua
Martin, Benjamin L.
Kimelman, David
Lin, Shuo
author_facet Veldman, Matthew B.
Zhao, Chengjian
Gomez, Gustavo A.
Lindgren, Anne G.
Huang, Haigen
Yang, Hanshuo
Yao, Shaohua
Martin, Benjamin L.
Kimelman, David
Lin, Shuo
author_sort Veldman, Matthew B.
collection PubMed
description Etsrp/Etv2 (Etv2) is an evolutionarily conserved master regulator of vascular development in vertebrates. Etv2 deficiency prevents the proper specification of the endothelial cell lineage, while its overexpression causes expansion of the endothelial cell lineage in the early embryo or in embryonic stem cells. We hypothesized that Etv2 alone is capable of transdifferentiating later somatic cells into endothelial cells. Using heat shock inducible Etv2 transgenic zebrafish, we demonstrate that Etv2 expression alone is sufficient to transdifferentiate fast skeletal muscle cells into functional blood vessels. Following heat treatment, fast skeletal muscle cells turn on vascular genes and repress muscle genes. Time-lapse imaging clearly shows that muscle cells turn on vascular gene expression, undergo dramatic morphological changes, and integrate into the existing vascular network. Lineage tracing and immunostaining confirm that fast skeletal muscle cells are the source of these newly generated vessels. Microangiography and observed blood flow demonstrated that this new vasculature is capable of supporting circulation. Using pharmacological, transgenic, and morpholino approaches, we further establish that the canonical Wnt pathway is important for induction of the transdifferentiation process, whereas the VEGF pathway provides a maturation signal for the endothelial fate. Additionally, overexpression of Etv2 in mammalian myoblast cells, but not in other cell types examined, induced expression of vascular genes. We have demonstrated in zebrafish that expression of Etv2 alone is sufficient to transdifferentiate fast skeletal muscle into functional endothelial cells in vivo. Given the evolutionarily conserved function of this transcription factor and the responsiveness of mammalian myoblasts to Etv2, it is likely that mammalian muscle cells will respond similarly.
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spelling pubmed-37087122013-07-12 Transdifferentiation of Fast Skeletal Muscle Into Functional Endothelium in Vivo by Transcription Factor Etv2 Veldman, Matthew B. Zhao, Chengjian Gomez, Gustavo A. Lindgren, Anne G. Huang, Haigen Yang, Hanshuo Yao, Shaohua Martin, Benjamin L. Kimelman, David Lin, Shuo PLoS Biol Research Article Etsrp/Etv2 (Etv2) is an evolutionarily conserved master regulator of vascular development in vertebrates. Etv2 deficiency prevents the proper specification of the endothelial cell lineage, while its overexpression causes expansion of the endothelial cell lineage in the early embryo or in embryonic stem cells. We hypothesized that Etv2 alone is capable of transdifferentiating later somatic cells into endothelial cells. Using heat shock inducible Etv2 transgenic zebrafish, we demonstrate that Etv2 expression alone is sufficient to transdifferentiate fast skeletal muscle cells into functional blood vessels. Following heat treatment, fast skeletal muscle cells turn on vascular genes and repress muscle genes. Time-lapse imaging clearly shows that muscle cells turn on vascular gene expression, undergo dramatic morphological changes, and integrate into the existing vascular network. Lineage tracing and immunostaining confirm that fast skeletal muscle cells are the source of these newly generated vessels. Microangiography and observed blood flow demonstrated that this new vasculature is capable of supporting circulation. Using pharmacological, transgenic, and morpholino approaches, we further establish that the canonical Wnt pathway is important for induction of the transdifferentiation process, whereas the VEGF pathway provides a maturation signal for the endothelial fate. Additionally, overexpression of Etv2 in mammalian myoblast cells, but not in other cell types examined, induced expression of vascular genes. We have demonstrated in zebrafish that expression of Etv2 alone is sufficient to transdifferentiate fast skeletal muscle into functional endothelial cells in vivo. Given the evolutionarily conserved function of this transcription factor and the responsiveness of mammalian myoblasts to Etv2, it is likely that mammalian muscle cells will respond similarly. Public Library of Science 2013-06-18 /pmc/articles/PMC3708712/ /pubmed/23853546 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.1001590 Text en © 2013 Veldman et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Veldman, Matthew B.
Zhao, Chengjian
Gomez, Gustavo A.
Lindgren, Anne G.
Huang, Haigen
Yang, Hanshuo
Yao, Shaohua
Martin, Benjamin L.
Kimelman, David
Lin, Shuo
Transdifferentiation of Fast Skeletal Muscle Into Functional Endothelium in Vivo by Transcription Factor Etv2
title Transdifferentiation of Fast Skeletal Muscle Into Functional Endothelium in Vivo by Transcription Factor Etv2
title_full Transdifferentiation of Fast Skeletal Muscle Into Functional Endothelium in Vivo by Transcription Factor Etv2
title_fullStr Transdifferentiation of Fast Skeletal Muscle Into Functional Endothelium in Vivo by Transcription Factor Etv2
title_full_unstemmed Transdifferentiation of Fast Skeletal Muscle Into Functional Endothelium in Vivo by Transcription Factor Etv2
title_short Transdifferentiation of Fast Skeletal Muscle Into Functional Endothelium in Vivo by Transcription Factor Etv2
title_sort transdifferentiation of fast skeletal muscle into functional endothelium in vivo by transcription factor etv2
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3708712/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23853546
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.1001590
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