Abstract

Paracrine signalling within the cardiac stem cell (CSC) niche controls CSC proliferation and differentiation, but the identity of putative mediators is poorly characterized. We isolated and clonally expanded Sca-1+/c-kit+ CSC from murine adult hearts. Upon culture in a differentiation medium (DIFF) containing 5-Azacytidine and TGF-β1, these cells differentiate into cardiomyocytes, as determined by up-regulation of mRNA encoding early (Nkx2.5; 230±3.5%; n=3, p 4-fold; p<0.01; n=3 preps). This was associated with downregulation of the de novo DNA methyltransferase, Dnmt3a, a bona fide target of miR29a. Notably, several Wnt/beta-catenin repressor genes, such as Wif-1, Sfrp1-2-4-5 (secreted frizzled-related protein), and Dkk1 (Dickkopf) exhibit CpG-islands in their promoter region, suggesting an epigenetic control repressing their expression through DNA methylation. Accordingly, early treatment of CSC with a miR-29a mimic (vs Scrambled ctl) decreased Dnmt3a and increased Wif-1 expression; conversely, treatment with Locked Nucleic Acid anti-miR29a (LNA-miR-29a) in DIFF upregulated Dnmt3a, downregulated Wif-1 and significantly decreased CSC differentiation (assessed by cTnt expression; all P<0.05 vs. LNA-scrambled control). We conclude that extinction of the endogenous canonical Wnt/β-catenin pathway is sufficient to allow Sca-1+ CSC differentiation and involves the upregulation of Wnt negative regulators, such as Wif-1, through miR-29a. Our data suggest a new epigenetic regulation of CSC differentiation through Dnmt3a, possibly amenable to therapeutic modulation for cardiac repair.

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