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      Cardiac lymphatics are heterogeneous in origin and respond to injury

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          Abstract

          The lymphatic vasculature is a blind-ended network crucial for tissue fluid homeostasis, immune surveillance and lipid absorption from the gut. Recent evidence has proposed an entirely venous-derived mammalian lymphatic system. In contrast, we reveal here that cardiac lymphatic vessels have a heterogeneous cellular origin, whereby formation of at least part of the cardiac lymphatic network is independent of sprouting from veins. Multiple cre-lox based lineage tracing revealed a potential contribution from the hemogenic endothelium during development and discrete lymphatic endothelial progenitor populations were confirmed by conditional knockout of Prox1 in Tie2+ and Vav1+ compartments. In the adult heart, myocardial infarction (MI) promoted a significant lymphangiogenic response, which was augmented by treatment with VEGF-C resulting in improved cardiac function. These data prompt the re-evaluation of a century-long debate on the origin of lymphatic vessels and suggest that lymphangiogenesis may represent a therapeutic target to promote cardiac repair following injury.

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          Most cited references32

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          Is Open Access

          A Computational Tool for Quantitative Analysis of Vascular Networks

          Angiogenesis is the generation of mature vascular networks from pre-existing vessels. Angiogenesis is crucial during the organism' development, for wound healing and for the female reproductive cycle. Several murine experimental systems are well suited for studying developmental and pathological angiogenesis. They include the embryonic hindbrain, the post-natal retina and allantois explants. In these systems vascular networks are visualised by appropriate staining procedures followed by microscopical analysis. Nevertheless, quantitative assessment of angiogenesis is hampered by the lack of readily available, standardized metrics and software analysis tools. Non-automated protocols are being used widely and they are, in general, time - and labour intensive, prone to human error and do not permit computation of complex spatial metrics. We have developed a light-weight, user friendly software, AngioTool, which allows for quick, hands-off and reproducible quantification of vascular networks in microscopic images. AngioTool computes several morphological and spatial parameters including the area covered by a vascular network, the number of vessels, vessel length, vascular density and lacunarity. In addition, AngioTool calculates the so-called “branching index” (branch points / unit area), providing a measurement of the sprouting activity of a specimen of interest. We have validated AngioTool using images of embryonic murine hindbrains, post-natal retinas and allantois explants. AngioTool is open source and can be downloaded free of charge.
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            Transgenic mice with hematopoietic and lymphoid specific expression of Cre.

            Bacteriophage P1 Cre/loxP based systems can be used to manipulate the genomes ofmice in vivo and in vitro, allowing the generation of tissue-specific conditional mutants. We have generated mouse lines expressing Cre recombinase in hematopoietic tissues using the vav regulatory elements, or in lymphoid cells using the hCD2 promoter and locus control region (LCR). The R26R-EYFP Cre reporter mouse line was used to determine the pattern of Cre expression in each line and enabled the assessment of Cre activity at a single-cell level. Analysis showed that the vav promoter elements were able to direct Cre-mediated recombination in all cells of the hematopoietic system. The hCD2 promoter and LCR on the other hand were able to drive Cre-mediated recombination only in T cells and B cells, but not in other hematopoietic cell types. Furthermore, in the appropriate tissues, deletion of the floxed target was complete in all cells, thereby excluding the possibility of variegated expression of the Cre transgene. Both of these Cre-transgenic lines will be useful in generating tissue-specific gene deletions within all the cells of hematopoietic or lymphoid tissues.
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              De novo cardiomyocytes from within the activated adult heart after injury

              A significant bottleneck in cardiovascular regenerative medicine is the identification of a viable source of stem/progenitor cells that could contribute new muscle after ischaemic heart disease and acute myocardial infarction. A therapeutic ideal--relative to cell transplantation--would be to stimulate a resident source, thus avoiding the caveats of limited graft survival, restricted homing to the site of injury and host immune rejection. Here we demonstrate in mice that the adult heart contains a resident stem or progenitor cell population, which has the potential to contribute bona fide terminally differentiated cardiomyocytes after myocardial infarction. We reveal a novel genetic label of the activated adult progenitors via re-expression of a key embryonic epicardial gene, Wilm's tumour 1 (Wt1), through priming by thymosin β4, a peptide previously shown to restore vascular potential to adult epicardium-derived progenitor cells with injury. Cumulative evidence indicates an epicardial origin of the progenitor population, and embryonic reprogramming results in the mobilization of this population and concomitant differentiation to give rise to de novo cardiomyocytes. Cell transplantation confirmed a progenitor source and chromosome painting of labelled donor cells revealed transdifferentiation to a myocyte fate in the absence of cell fusion. Derived cardiomyocytes are shown here to structurally and functionally integrate with resident muscle; as such, stimulation of this adult progenitor pool represents a significant step towards resident-cell-based therapy in human ischaemic heart disease.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                0410462
                6011
                Nature
                Nature
                Nature
                0028-0836
                1476-4687
                16 April 2015
                4 June 2015
                04 December 2015
                : 522
                : 7554
                : 62-67
                Affiliations
                [1 ]UCL-Institute of Child Health, Molecular Medicine Unit, 30 Guilford Street, London WC1N 1EH, United Kingdom
                [2 ]University of Oxford, Department of Physiology, Anatomy and Genetics, South Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3PT, United Kingdom
                [3 ]Regenerative Medicine Laboratory, University of Genoa & IRCCS AOU San Martino-IST, Largo Rosanna Benzi, 16132 Genoa, Italy
                [4 ]Laboratory for Cell Asymmetry, RIKEN Center for Developmental Biology, 2-2-3, Minatojiima-Minamimachi, Chuou-ku, Kobe 650-0047, Japan
                Author notes
                [# ]Corresponding author: paul.riley@ 123456dpag.ox.ac.uk ; Phone: +44 (0)1865 282366
                [*]

                Joint first author contribution

                Author Contributions

                L.K., S.N. and J.M.V. carried out all experiments (except MI surgeries and MRI scanning), analyzed the data and contributed figures for the manuscript. K.D., S.B., M.M. and M.R. performed all MI surgeries and post-processed the hearts in preparation for immunofluorescence. F.M. provided the RIKEN Prox1-floxed mice. S.N. and C.A.C performed blinded-MRI scanning and analyzed the data. P.R.R. established the hypotheses and analyzed the data. J.M.V. and P.R.R supervised the studies and co-wrote the manuscript. All authors declare no conflicting or competing interests.

                Article
                EMS62965
                10.1038/nature14483
                4458138
                25992544
                459b8ea8-e203-432e-b96b-e65c2f92dd57
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