Abstract

The planar cell polarity pathway is required for heart development and whilst the functions of most pathway members are known, the roles of the jnk genes in cardiac morphogenesis remain unknown as mouse mutants exhibit functional redundancy, with early embryonic lethality of compound mutants. In this study zebrafish were used to overcome early embryonic lethality in mouse models and establish the requirement for Jnk in heart development. Whole mount in-situ hybridisation and RT-PCR demonstrated that evolutionarily conserved alternative spliced jnk1a and jnk1b transcripts were expressed in the early developing heart. Maternal zygotic null mutant zebrafish lines for jnk1a and jnk1b, generated using CRISPR-Cas9, revealed a requirement for jnk1a in formation of the proximal, first heart field (FHF)-derived portion of the cardiac ventricular chamber. Rescue of the jnk1a mutant cardiac phenotype was only possible by injection of the jnk1a EX7 Lg alternatively spliced transcript. Analysis of mutants indicated that there was a reduction in the size of the hand2 expression field in jnk1a mutants which led to a specific reduction in FHF ventricular cardiomyocytes within the anterior lateral plate mesoderm. Moreover, the jnk1a mutant ventricular defect could be rescued by injection of hand2 mRNA. This study reveals a novel and critical requirement for Jnk1 in heart development and highlights the importance of alternative splicing in vertebrate cardiac morphogenesis. Genetic pathways functioning through jnk1 may be important in human heart malformations with left ventricular hypoplasia.

Highlights

  • Over 1% of the population have structural congenital heart disease (CHD) [1]

  • Using CRISPR-cas9-derived null mutants and mRNA rescue studies, we show a specific requirement for the jnk1a Ex7 Lg transcript in development of the first heart field (FHF)-derived ventricle; the evolutionary equivalent of the left ventricle in man

  • We go on to determine that the FHF-ventricular hypoplasia found in mutants originates from a reduction in the number of specified cardiomyocytes in the anterior lateral plate mesoderm (ALPM), and this is due to a reduction in the expression field of the key transcriptional regulator hand2

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Summary

Author summary

The jnk gene family is known to act within this pathway but its specific role in heart development has been difficult to establish using mouse mutants because genes within the family overlap in function and embryos mutant for more than one jnk gene die before the heart is fully formed. We can fully reverse the abnormalities in jnk1a embryos by increasing hand gene activity This part of the zebrafish ventricular chamber is equivalent to the left ventricle in humans and understanding how jnk genes work may help understand why some human heart malformations are associated with an underdeveloped left ventricle

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