4.8 Article

Lymphoangiocrine signals promote cardiac growth and repair

Journal

NATURE
Volume 588, Issue 7839, Pages 705-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-020-2998-x

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [RO1HL073402-16, T32 GM008061, HL63762, NS093382, 1S10OD011996-01, 1S10OD026814-01]
  2. AHA [18CDA34110356, 5T32HL134633]
  3. Spanish Ministry of Education, Culture and Sports
  4. Leducq [TNE-17CVD]
  5. Northwestern University NUSeq Core Facility
  6. NCI CCSG [P30 CA060553]
  7. NIH NIAID [P01AI112522]
  8. NCRR [1S10 RR031680-01]
  9. NIDDK [P30 DK114857]
  10. EMBO Short-Term Fellowship
  11. Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation, and Universities [RD16/0011/0019]
  12. NIH Office of Director [S10OD025194]
  13. [P41 GM108569]

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Lymphatic endothelium secretes factors needed for heart growth and repair such as RELN, which helps with heart regeneration and cardioprotection after myocardial infarction. Recent studies have suggested that lymphatics help to restore heart function after cardiac injury(1-6). Here we report that lymphatics promote cardiac growth, repair and cardioprotection in mice. We show that a lymphoangiocrine signal produced by lymphatic endothelial cells (LECs) controls the proliferation and survival of cardiomyocytes during heart development, improves neonatal cardiac regeneration and is cardioprotective after myocardial infarction. Embryos that lack LECs develop smaller hearts as a consequence of reduced cardiomyocyte proliferation and increased cardiomyocyte apoptosis. Culturing primary mouse cardiomyocytes in LEC-conditioned medium increases cardiomyocyte proliferation and survival, which indicates that LECs produce lymphoangiocrine signals that control cardiomyocyte homeostasis. Characterization of the LEC secretome identified the extracellular protein reelin (RELN) as a key component of this process. Moreover, we report that LEC-specific Reln-null mouse embryos develop smaller hearts, that RELN is required for efficient heart repair and function after neonatal myocardial infarction, and that cardiac delivery of RELN using collagen patches improves heart function in adult mice after myocardial infarction by a cardioprotective effect. These results highlight a lymphoangiocrine role of LECs during cardiac development and injury response, and identify RELN as an important mediator of this function.

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