BACKGROUND:
NOTCH1
pathogenic variants are implicated in multiple types of congenital heart defects including hypoplastic left heart syndrome, where the left ventricle is underdeveloped. It is unknown how
NOTCH1
regulates human cardiac cell lineage determination and cardiomyocyte proliferation. In addition, mechanisms by which
NOTCH1
pathogenic variants lead to ventricular hypoplasia in hypoplastic left heart syndrome remain elusive.
METHODS:
CRISPR/Cas9 genome editing was utilized to delete
NOTCH1
in human induced pluripotent stem cells. Cardiac differentiation was carried out by sequential modulation of WNT signaling, and
NOTCH1
knockout and wild-type differentiating cells were collected at day 0, 2, 5, 10, 14, and 30 for single-cell RNA-seq.
RESULTS:
Human
NOTCH1
knockout induced pluripotent stem cells are able to generate functional cardiomyocytes and endothelial cells, suggesting that NOTCH1 is not required for mesoderm differentiation and cardiovascular development in vitro. However, disruption of NOTCH1 blocks human ventricular-like cardiomyocyte differentiation but promotes atrial-like cardiomyocyte generation through shortening the action potential duration.
NOTCH1
deficiency leads to defective proliferation of early human cardiomyocytes, and transcriptomic analysis indicates that pathways involved in cell cycle progression and mitosis are downregulated in
NOTCH1
knockout cardiomyocytes. Single-cell transcriptomic analysis reveals abnormal cell lineage determination of cardiac mesoderm, which is manifested by the biased differentiation toward epicardial and second heart field progenitors at the expense of first heart field progenitors in
NOTCH1
knockout cell populations.
CONCLUSIONS:
NOTCH1
is essential for human ventricular-like cardiomyocyte differentiation and proliferation through balancing cell fate determination of cardiac mesoderm and modulating cell cycle progression. Because first heart field progenitors primarily contribute to the left ventricle, we speculate that pathogenic
NOTCH1
variants lead to biased differentiation of first heart field progenitors, blocked ventricular-like cardiomyocyte differentiation, and defective cardiomyocyte proliferation, which collaboratively contribute to left ventricular hypoplasia in hypoplastic left heart syndrome.
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