Hypoxia induces myocardial regeneration in zebrafish
C Jopling, G Suné, A Faucherre, C Fabregat… - Circulation, 2012 - ahajournals.org
C Jopling, G Suné, A Faucherre, C Fabregat, JC Izpisua Belmonte
Circulation, 2012•ahajournals.orgBackground—Hypoxia plays an important role in many biological/pathological processes. In
particular, hypoxia is associated with cardiac ischemia. which, although initially inducing a
protective response, will ultimately lead to the death of cardiomyocytes and loss of tissue,
severely affecting cardiac functionality. Although myocardial damage/loss remains an
insurmountable problem for adult mammals, the same is not true for adult zebrafish, which
are able to completely regenerate their heart after extensive injury. Myocardial regeneration …
particular, hypoxia is associated with cardiac ischemia. which, although initially inducing a
protective response, will ultimately lead to the death of cardiomyocytes and loss of tissue,
severely affecting cardiac functionality. Although myocardial damage/loss remains an
insurmountable problem for adult mammals, the same is not true for adult zebrafish, which
are able to completely regenerate their heart after extensive injury. Myocardial regeneration …
Background
Hypoxia plays an important role in many biological/pathological processes. In particular, hypoxia is associated with cardiac ischemia. which, although initially inducing a protective response, will ultimately lead to the death of cardiomyocytes and loss of tissue, severely affecting cardiac functionality. Although myocardial damage/loss remains an insurmountable problem for adult mammals, the same is not true for adult zebrafish, which are able to completely regenerate their heart after extensive injury. Myocardial regeneration in zebrafish involves the dedifferentiation and proliferation of cardiomyocytes to replace the damaged/missing tissue; at present, however, little is known about what factors regulate this process.
Methods and Results
We surmised that ventricular amputation would lead to hypoxia induction in the myocardium of zebrafish and that this may play a role in regulating the regeneration of the missing cardiac tissue. Using a combination of O2 perturbation, conditional transgenics, in vitro cell culture, and microarray analysis, we found that hypoxia induces cardiomyocytes to dedifferentiate and proliferate during heart regeneration in zebrafish and have identified a number of genes that could play a role in this process.
Conclusion
These results indicate that hypoxia plays a positive role during heart regeneration, which should be taken into account in future strategies aimed at inducing heart regeneration in humans.
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