Abstract

BackgroundCardiac induction, the first step in heart development in vertebrate embryos, is thought to be initiated by anterior endoderm during gastrulation, but what the signals are and how they act is unknown. Several signaling pathways, including FGF, Nodal, BMP and Wnt have been implicated in cardiac specification, in both gain- and loss-of-function experiments. However, as these pathways regulate germ layer formation and patterning, their specific roles in cardiac induction have been difficult to define.Methodology/Principal FindingsTo investigate the mechanisms of cardiac induction directly we devised an assay based on conjugates of anterior endoderm from early gastrula stage Xenopus embryos as the inducing tissue and pluripotent ectodermal explants as the responding tissue. We show that the anterior endoderm produces a specific signal, as skeletal muscle is not induced. Cardiac inducing signal needs up to two hours of interaction with the responding tissue to produce an effect. While we found that the BMP pathway was not necessary, our results demonstrate that the FGF and Nodal pathways are essential for cardiogenesis. They were required only during the first hour of cardiogenesis, while sustained activation of ERK was required for at least four hours. Our results also show that transient early activation of the Wnt/β-catenin pathway has no effect on cardiogenesis, while later activation of the pathway antagonizes cardiac differentiation.Conclusions/SignificanceWe have described an assay for investigating the mechanisms of cardiac induction by anterior endoderm. The assay was used to provide evidence for a direct, early and transient requirement of FGF and Nodal pathways. In addition, we demonstrate that Wnt/β-catenin pathway plays no direct role in vertebrate cardiac specification, but needs to be suppressed just prior to differentiation.

Highlights

  • The earliest step in vertebrate heart formation, specification of cardiac progenitors, is poorly understood

  • Anterior endoderm explants were conjugated with animal caps and cardiac induction was assessed by expression of Nkx2.5, an early marker of heart field in neurula embryos, and at early tadpole stages by expression of a panel of cardiomyocyte-specific markers

  • Anterior endoderm induced expression of Nkx2.5 in st. 16 conjugates and of all myocardial-specific markers examined at early tadpole stages (MLC2, cTnI, MHCa). This was in contrast to posterior endoderm, which was incapable of inducing cardiogenesis (Fig. 1B)

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Summary

Introduction

The earliest step in vertebrate heart formation, specification of cardiac progenitors, is poorly understood. We know that cardiac induction occurs during gastrulation, but the precise details of the timing and the nature of the signals are unknown One reason for this low resolution picture is that the analyses of cardiac specification are necessarily retrospective, since there are no markers uniquely associated with cardiac fate that would allow cardiac progenitors to be traced from the time of their specification until they initiate terminal differentiation. The first step in heart development in vertebrate embryos, is thought to be initiated by anterior endoderm during gastrulation, but what the signals are and how they act is unknown. Several signaling pathways, including FGF, Nodal, BMP and Wnt have been implicated in cardiac specification, in both gain- and loss-of-function experiments. As these pathways regulate germ layer formation and patterning, their specific roles in cardiac induction have been difficult to define

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