4.7 Article

Wt1 and Epicardial Fate Mapping

Journal

CIRCULATION RESEARCH
Volume 111, Issue 2, Pages 165-U97

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.112.273946

Keywords

cardiomyocyte; epicardium; lineage tracing; Wt1

Funding

  1. German Research Foundation (D.F.G.) for the Cluster of Excellence REBIRTH (From Regenerative Biology to Reconstructive Therapy)
  2. German Research Foundation (D.F.G.) for the Clinical Research Group at Hannover Medical School [KFO136]

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Rationale: The embryonic epicardium is a crucial cell source of the cardiac fibrous skeleton as well as of the coronary system. Genetic lineage tracing systems based on Wt1 regulatory sequences provided evidence that epicardium-derived cells also adopt a myocardial fate in the mouse. Objective: To define the adequacy of Wt1-based lineage tracing systems for epicardial fate mapping. Methods and Results: Using in situ hybridization analysis and immunofluorescence on tissue sections, we detected endogenous expression of Wt1 mRNA and Wt1 protein in the proepicardium and epicardium and also in endothelial cells throughout cardiogenesis. Expression analysis of a sensitive GFP reporter showed that recombination mediated by cre recombinase in the Wt1(creEGFP) line occurs randomly and sporadically in all cells of the embryo. Recombination in cardiomyocytes was found in the linear heart tube before establishment of a (pro) epicardium. In contrast, the tamoxifen-inducible Wt1(creERT2) mouse line mediated poor and variable recombination in the epicardium. Recombination in cardiomyocytes was not detected in this case. Conclusions: Frequently used Wt1 based cre-mediated lineage tracing systems are not suitable for epicardial fate mapping because of endogenous endothelial expression of Wt1, ectopic recombination (Wt1(creEGFP)), and poor recombination efficiency (Wt1(creERT2)) in the developing heart. We conclude that claims of a cardiomyocyte fate of epicardial cells in the mouse are not substantiated. (Circ Res. 2012;111:165-169.)

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