Publication | Open Access
MCT‐4, A511/basigin and EF5 expression patterns during early chick cardiomyogenesis indicate cardiac cell differentiation occurs in a hypoxic environment
16
Citations
23
References
2005
Year
Cardiac MuscleCardiac Progenitor CellsMetabolic RemodelingEf5 Expression PatternsCellular PhysiologyEarly Chick CardiomyogenesisHypoxia Marker Ef5Cell SignalingCardiologyCell PhysiologyHealth SciencesCardiomyopathyMolecular PhysiologyBiochemistryChick Heart FieldsOrganogenesisGene ExpressionCardiac ReprogrammingCell BiologyMct-4 ExpressionCardiac PathologyEnergy MetabolismDevelopmental BiologySignal TransductionPhysiologyCardiac Cell DifferentiationCardiovascular PhysiologyMetabolismMedicine
We have identified the presence of the hypoxia marker EF5 in the stage 4/5 chick heart fields. This suggests that cardiac cell differentiation occurs in a relatively anaerobic environment. Monocarboxylate transporter (MCT) studies in adult cardiac myocytes have demonstrated that MCTs catalyze proton-linked pyruvate and lactate transport activity. 5A11/Basigin is an ancillary protein that targets MCTs to the plasma membrane for their function. MCT-4 expression is most evident in cells with a high glycolytic rate associated with hypoxic energy production. Subsequent to the immunohistochemical localization of EF5 in the early heart field, we continued in our analysis during stages 5 to 12 for the expression of indicators of cellular glycolytic metabolism in the developing heart, such as MCT-4, MCT-1, and 5A11 (Basigin/CD147). Our observations indicate that MCT-4 and 5A11/Basigin are expressed early, in a differential left-right pattern, in the bi-lateral plate mesoderm, as the cardiac compartment is forming. At stage 11, MCT-4/5A11 continues to be highly expressed in the myocardial wall of the looping heart, but not in the dorsal mesocardium. RT-PCR analyses for MCT-1, -4, and 5A11 indicate that MCT-4 and 5A11 are expressed throughout precardiac, embryonic, and fetal stages in the heart. MCT-1 is first detected in the heart on embryonic day 3 and then remains expressed throughout development to hatching. These results indicate that cardiac precursor cells are equipped for differentiating in a hypoxic environment using anaerobic metabolism for energy production.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1