4.8 Article

Single-cell analysis of cardiogenesis reveals basis for organ-level developmental defects

Journal

NATURE
Volume 572, Issue 7767, Pages 120-+

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-019-1414-x

Keywords

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Funding

  1. UCSF Chancellor's Fellowship
  2. Genentech Foundation Fellowship
  3. Phi Beta Kappa Graduate Scholarship
  4. National Heart Lung and Blood Institute [R01 HL057181, P01 HL089707, UM1HL098179, UM1HL128761]
  5. California Institute for Regenerative Medicine [DISC2-09098]
  6. Roddenberry Foundation
  7. L.K. Whittier Foundation
  8. Younger Family Fund
  9. FNR CORE grant [C15/BM/10397420]
  10. University of Luxembourg IRP Grant [R-AGR-3227-11]
  11. NIH/NCRR [C06 RR018928]

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Organogenesis involves integration of diverse cell types; dysregulation of cell-type-specific gene networks results in birth defects, which affect 5% of live births. Congenital heart defects are the most common malformations, and result from disruption of discrete subsets of cardiac progenitor cells(1), but the transcriptional changes in individual progenitors that lead to organ-level defects remain unknown. Here we used single-cell RNA sequencing to interrogate early cardiac progenitor cells as they become specified during normal and abnormal cardiogenesis, revealing how dysregulation of specific cellular subpopulations has catastrophic consequences. A network-based computational method for single-cell RNA-sequencing analysis that predicts lineage-specifying transcription factors(2,3) identified Hand2 as a specifier of outflow tract cells but not right ventricular cells, despite the failure of right ventricular formation in Hand2-null mice(4). Temporal single-cell-transcriptome analysis of Hand2-null embryos revealed failure of outflow tract myocardium specification, whereas right ventricular myocardium was specified but failed to properly differentiate and migrate. Loss of Hand2 also led to dysregulation of retinoic acid signalling and disruption of anterior-posterior patterning of cardiac progenitors. This work reveals transcriptional determinants that specify fate and differentiation in individual cardiac progenitor cells, and exposes mechanisms of disrupted cardiac development at single-cell resolution, providing a framework for investigating congenital heart defects.

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