Islamabad, Jan 27 : Scientists at the Gladstone Institutes
have identified a finely tuned mechanism by which fetal heart muscle develops
into a healthy and fully formed beating heart -- offering new insight into the
genetic causes of congenital heart disease and opening the door to one day
developing therapies to fight this chronic and potentially fatal
disorder.
In a paper published in Nature Genetics, researchers in the
laboratory of Gladstone Senior Investigator Benoit Bruneau, PhD, describe the
roles that two genes -- Ezh2 and Six1 -- play in embryonic heart development,
while also uncovering how the genetic basis of embryonic heart formation can
have profound health consequences later in life.
This research highlights
the emerging importance of a biological process called "epigenetics," in which a
genetic change that is inherited by a cell or organism early during development
has long-term consequences. Epigenetics is of particular interest in heart
development, as the incorrect activation of genes in fetal development can lead
to congenital heart disease into adulthood.
"Approximately 1.3 million
children and adults in the United States live with congenital heart disease --
requiring daily medications, surgeries and for some, heart transplants," said
Dr. Bruneau, who is also a professor of Pediatrics at the University of
California, San Francisco, with which Gladstone is affiliated. "An understanding
of the epigenetic regulation of heart development could someday bring us closer
to improving the lives of these individuals."
At specific times during
healthy heart development, Ezh2 acts as a "master regulator," shutting off genes
that are no longer needed or that need to be kept off. In the past, the focus
has been on which genes get switched on during normal heart development. But in
this paper, Dr. Bruneau, along with Gladstone Postdoctoral Scholar Paul
Delgado-Olguin, PhD, investigated which genes must remain off to ensure the
development of a healthy heart.
In laboratory experiments, Drs. Bruneau
and Delgado-Olguin removed Ezh2 from mice at various developmental stages,
monitoring any ensuing genetic or physical changes and comparing them to mice
whose Ezh2 remained intact. Surprisingly, mice without Ezh2 developed normally
in the uterus. It wasn't until after birth that they began to show problems.
Their hearts became enlarged and weakened and were unable to pump blood
efficiently. An enlarged heart is a hallmark feature of cardiomyopathy, a form
of congenital heart disease that afflicts thousands of children each year and
for which the only manifestation may be sudden death.
Further analysis
revealed that Six1 is normally on only for a brief period during heart
development, after which Ezh2 shuts it off for good. But without Ezh2 to act as
a regulator, Six1 remains on -- leading to heart problems later in
life.
"When Six1 remains active for too long in Ezh2-deficient mice, it
boosts the activity of other genes that shouldn't be activated in heart-muscle
cells -- such as genes that make skeletal muscle," said Dr. Delgado-Olguin. "The
enlargement and thickening of the mice's hearts over time eventually led to
heart failure."
This breakthrough may help researchers improve their
understanding of the genetic causes of congenital heart disease while also
pointing the way to potential therapies. For example, a type of congenital heart
disease called dilated cardiomyopathy is caused by mutations in Eya4, a gene
that is also regulated by Ezh2 in the heart.
"Six1 is just one of many
Ezh2-regulated genes that are vital for heart development," said Dr. Bruneau.
"Our next goal is to find out exactly how Ezh2 regulates these other genes, so
that we can begin to develop a complete genomic blueprint of how a heart becomes
a heart."
Ends
SA/EN
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» Scientists identify mechanism to develop fully formed beating heart
Scientists identify mechanism to develop fully formed beating heart
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