The Role of Bmp- and Fgf Signaling Modulating Mouse Proepicardium Cell Fate
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García Padilla, Carlos; Hernández Torres, Francisco; Lozano Velasco, Estefanía; Aránega, Amelia Eva; Franco, DiegoEditorial
Frontiers
Materia
Bmp Fgf Proepicardium Cell fate Heart development
Date
2022-01-04Referencia bibliográfica
Garcia-Padilla C... [et al.] (2022) The Role of Bmp- and Fgf Signaling Modulating Mouse Proepicardium Cell Fate. Front. Cell Dev. Biol. 9:757781. doi: [10.3389/fcell.2021.757781]
Abstract
Bmp and Fgf signaling are widely involved in multiple aspects of embryonic development.
More recently non coding RNAs, such as microRNAs have also been reported to play
essential roles during embryonic development. We have previously demonstrated that
microRNAs, i.e., miR-130, play an essential role modulating Bmp and Fgf signaling during
early stages of cardiomyogenesis. More recently, we have also demonstrated that
microRNAs are capable of modulating cell fate decision during proepicardial/septum
transversum (PE/ST) development, since over-expression of miR-23 blocked while miR-
125, miR-146, miR-223 and miR-195 enhanced PE/ST-derived cardiomyogenesis,
respectively. Importantly, regulation of these microRNAs is distinct modulated by
Bmp2 and Fgf2 administration in chicken. In this study, we aim to dissect the
functional role of Bmp and Fgf signaling during mouse PE/ST development, their
implication regulating post-transcriptional modulators such as microRNAs and their
impact on lineage determination. Mouse PE/ST explants and epicardial/endocardial cell
cultures were distinctly administrated Bmp and Fgf family members. qPCR analyses of
distinct microRNAs, cardiomyogenic, fibrogenic differentiation markers as well as key
elements directly epithelial to mesenchymal transition were evaluated. Our data
demonstrate that neither Bmp2/Bmp4 nor Fgf2/Fgf8 signaling is capable of inducing
cardiomyogenesis, fibrogenesis or inducing EMT in mouse PE/ST explants, yet
deregulation of several microRNAs is observed, in contrast to previous findings in
chicken PE/ST. RNAseq analyses in mouse PE/ST and embryonic epicardium
identified novel Bmp and Fgf family members that might be involved in such cell fate
differences, however, their implication on EMT induction and cardiomyogenic and/or
fibrogenic differentiation is limited. Thus our data support the notion of species-specific
differences regulating PE/ST cardiomyogenic lineage commitment.