Abstract

Bicuspid aortic valve (BAV) is the most prevalent human congenital cardiac malformation. It may appear isolated, associated with other cardiovascular malformations, or forming part of syndromes. Cranial neural crest (NC) defects are supposed to be the cause of the spectrum of disorders associated with syndromic BAV. Experimental studies with an inbred hamster model of isolated BAV showed that alterations in the migration or differentiation of the cardiac NC cells in the embryonic cardiac outflow tract are most probably responsible for the development of this congenital valvular defect. We hypothesize that isolated BAV is not the result of local, but of early alterations in the behavior of the NC cells, thus also affecting other cranial NC-derived structures. Therefore, we tested whether morphological variation of the aortic valve is linked to phenotypic variation of the mandible and the thymus in the hamster model of isolated BAV, compared to a control strain. Our results show significant differences in the size and shape of the mandible as well as in the cellular composition of the thymus between the two strains, and in mandible shape regarding the morphology of the aortic valve. Given that both the mandible and the thymus are cranial NC derivatives, and that the cardiac NC belongs to the cephalic domain, we propose that the causal defect leading to isolated BAV during embryonic development is not restricted to local alterations of the cardiac NC cells in the cardiac outflow tract, but it is of pleiotropic or polytopic nature. Our results suggest that isolated BAV may be the forme fruste of a polytopic syndrome involving the cranial NC in the hamster model and in a proportion of affected patients.

Highlights

  • The aortic valve of mammals is the anatomical structure responsible for preventing blood reflux from the aorta to the left ventricle

  • Variation resulting from measurement error was negligible, since it was significantly exceeded by variation in fluctuating asymmetry (Tables 1 and 2)

  • Hamsters with bicuspid aortic valve (BAV) do not develop the associated complications frequently found in human patients, i.e. valvulopathies and aorthopathies, the anatomy and the inheritance pattern of this valvular defect are similar in both species

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Summary

Introduction

The aortic valve of mammals is the anatomical structure responsible for preventing blood reflux from the aorta to the left ventricle. It normally holds three leaflets or cusps and is named tricuspid aortic valve (TAV). Congenital malformations of the aortic valve may cause clinically relevant valve malfunction. The most frequent congenital aortic valve malformation is the bicuspid aortic valve (BAV), which is the most prevalent human cardiac malformation, with an incidence of 0.5–2% in the general population [1,2,3]. It has been estimated that BAV disease is responsible for more human deaths than the sum of all the other known congenital cardiac malformations [10]

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