Abstract

Endocardium is the major source of coronary endothelial cells (ECs) in the fetal and neonatal hearts. It remains unclear whether endocardium in the adult stage is also the main origin of neovascularization after cardiac injury. To define the vascular potential of adult endocardium in homeostasis and after cardiac injuries by fate-mapping studies. We generate an inducible adult endocardial Cre line (Npr3 [natriuretic peptide receptor C]-CreER) and show that Npr3-CreER efficiently and specifically labels endocardial cells but not coronary blood vessels in the adult heart. The adult endocardial cells do not contribute to any vascular ECs during cardiac homeostasis. To examine the formation of blood vessels from endocardium after injury, we generate 4 cardiac injury models with Npr3-CreER mice: myocardial infarction, myocardial ischemia-reperfusion, cryoinjury, and transverse aortic constriction. Lineage tracing experiments show that adult endocardium minimally contributes to coronary ECs after myocardial infarction. In the myocardial ischemia-reperfusion, cryoinjury, or transverse aortic constriction models, adult endocardial cells do not give rise to any vascular ECs, and they remain on the inner surface of myocardium that connects with lumen circulation. In the myocardial infarction model, very few endocardial cells are trapped in the infarct zone of myocardium shortly after ligation of coronary artery, indicating the involvement of endocardial entrapment during blood vessels formation. When these adult endocardial cells are relocated and trapped in the infarcted myocardium by transplantation or myocardial constriction model, very few endocardial cells survive and gain vascular EC properties, and their contribution to neovascularization in the injured myocardium remains minimal. Unlike its fetal or neonatal counterpart, adult endocardium naturally generates minimal, if any, coronary arteries or vascular ECs during cardiac homeostasis or after injuries.

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