hapln1a + cells guide coronary growth during heart morphogenesis and regeneration

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Abstract

Although several tissues and chemokines orchestrate coronary formation, the guidance cues for coronary growth remain unclear. Here, we profile the juvenile zebrafish epicardium during coronary vascularization and identify hapln1a + cells enriched with vascular-regulating genes. hapln1a + cells not only envelop vessels but also form linear structures ahead of coronary sprouts. Live-imaging demonstrates that coronary growth occurs along these pre-formed structures, with depletion of hapln1a + cells blocking this growth. hapln1a + cells also pre-lead coronary sprouts during regeneration and hapln1a + cell loss inhibits revascularization. Further, we identify serpine1 expression in hapln1a + cells adjacent to coronary sprouts, and serpine1 inhibition blocks vascularization and revascularization. Moreover, we observe the hapln1a substrate, hyaluronan, forming linear structures along and preceding coronary vessels. Depletion of hapln1a + cells or serpine1 activity inhibition disrupts hyaluronan structure. Our studies reveal that hapln1a + cells and serpine1 are required for coronary production by establishing a microenvironment to facilitate guided coronary growth.

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Sun, J., Peterson, E. A., Chen, X., & Wang, J. (2023). hapln1a + cells guide coronary growth during heart morphogenesis and regeneration. Nature Communications, 14(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-39323-6

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