Myology 2005 - Tuesday, May 10th -
Plenary lecture "Heart cell lineage
diversification in physiology and disease : the islet-1 cardiovascular
progenitor story
The heart is composed of diverse muscle and non-muscle cell lineages:
atrial/ventricular/conduction system/smooth muscle myocytes,
endocardial/endothelial, and valvular. Congenital heart diseases can arise from
defects in the pathways for heart lineage specification (Pashmforoush et al,
Cell 2004), and human degenerative diseases can arise in a subset of ventricular
and pacemaker cells, (for review see Chien and Karsenty, Cell, 2005). The
pathways that guide heart cell lineage diversification are relatively obscure,
as the primordial heart precursor cells have not been clearly identified.
Recently, we reported the identification of isl1+ cardiac progenitors in
post-natal rat, mouse, and human heart muscle (Laugwitz et al Nature, 2005). A
cardiac mesenchymal feeder layer drives progenitor cell renewal, maintaining
their triggered differentiation into fully mature cardiomyocyte phenotype in the
absence of cell fusion. A tamoxifen-inducible Cre/lox system allows selective in
vivo marking of this progenitor cell population and purification by FACS
analysis. In lineage tracing studies with islet-cre knock-in mice, the islet
precursors represent master heart progenitors that give rise to all of the major
muscle and non-muscle cell lineages, e.g., SA nodal, venous and coronary
arterial endothelial/smooth muscle, and valvular. Utilizing mouse ES cells that
harbor a knock-in of LacZ into the Isl-1 locus, there is now the feasibility of
isolating isl1+ cardiac progenitors from mouse and human ES cell systems during
in vitro cardiogenesis. This system should allow the rapid and direct
identification of the pathways which guide the formation, renewal, and
diversification of islet master heart progenitors into distinct heart cell
lineages, and forms a biological foundation for the tissue engineering of
specific heart components.