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Circulation Research. 2004;94:e107-e116
Published online before print June 10, 2004, doi: 10.1161/01.RES.0000134852.12783.6e
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(Circulation Research. 2004;94:e107.)
© 2004 American Heart Association, Inc.


UltraRapid Communication

Avian Precardiac Endoderm/Mesoderm Induces Cardiac Myocyte Differentiation in Murine Embryonic Stem Cells

Diane Rudy-Reil, John Lough

From the Department of Cell Biology, Neurobiology, and Anatomy and Cardiovascular Center, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Wis.

Correspondence to Dr John W. Lough, Department of Cell Biology, Neurobiology, and Anatomy, Medical College of Wisconsin, 8701 Watertown Plank Rd, Milwaukee, WI 53226. E-mail jlough{at}mcw.edu

The ability to regenerate damaged myocardium with tissue derived from embryonic stem (ES) cells is currently undergoing extensive investigation. As a prerequisite to transplantation therapy, strategies must be developed to induce ES cells to the cardiac phenotype. Toward this end, cues from mechanisms of embryonic induction have been exploited, based on previous findings that anterior lateral endoderm (precardiac endoderm) from gastrulation-stage chick embryos potently induces cardiac myocyte differentiation in both precardiac and nonprecardiac mesoderm. Hypothesizing that avian precardiac endoderm acting as feeder/inducer cells would induce high percentage conversion of murine ES (mES) cells into cardiac myocytes, it was observed that the majority ({approx} 65%) of cocultured ES cell-derived embryoid bodies (EBs) were enriched in cardiac myocytes and exhibited rhythmic contractions. By contrast, mouse EBs cultured alone, or on feeder layers of mouse embryonic fibroblasts or avian nonprecardiac posterior endoderm, contained only 7% to 16% cardiac myocytes while exhibiting a relatively low incidence (<10%) of beating. When mES cells were cocultured with a bilayer of explanted precardiac endoderm/mesoderm, the incidence of rhythmically contractile EBs increased to 100%. To verify that the rhythmically contractile cells were derived from murine ES cells, cell-free medium conditioned by avian precardiac endoderm/mesoderm was used to induce myocyte differentiation in a mES cell-line containing a nuclear LacZ reporter marker gene under control of the cardiac-specific {alpha}-myosin heavy chain promoter, resulting in rhythmic contractility in 92% of EBs in which the majority of cells (average=86%) were identified as cardiac myocytes. The inductive efficacy of medium conditioned by avian precardiac endoderm/mesoderm may provide an opportunity to biochemically define factors that induce cardiac myocyte differentiation in ES cells. The full text of this article is available online at http://circres.ahajournals.org.


Key Words: cardiac myocyte differentiation • embryoid bodies • endoderm/mesoderm cell-free conditioned medium • cardiac induction • mouse embryonic stem cells • precardiac endoderm • precardiac mesoderm • pre-embryoid bodies




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J. R. Van Orman, D. Weihrauch, D. C. Warltier, and J. Lough
Myocardial interstitial fluid inhibits proliferation and cardiomyocyte differentiation in pluripotent embryonic stem cells
Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol, October 1, 2009; 297(4): H1369 - H1376.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]