AimsA better understanding of the pathways that regulate regeneration of the coronary vasculature is of fundamental importance for the advancement of strategies to treat patients with heart disease. Here, we aimed to investigate the origin and clonal dynamics of endothelial cells (ECs) associated with neovascularization in the adult mouse heart following myocardial infarction (MI). Furthermore, we sought to define murine cardiac endothelial heterogeneity and to characterize the transcriptional profiles of pro-angiogenic resident ECs in the adult mouse heart, at single-cell resolution.Methods and resultsAn EC-specific multispectral lineage-tracing mouse (Pdgfb-iCreERT2-R26R-Brainbow2.1) was used to demonstrate that structural integrity of adult cardiac endothelium following MI was maintained through clonal proliferation by resident ECs in the infarct border region, without significant contributions from bone marrow cells or endothelial-to-mesenchymal transition. Ten transcriptionally discrete heterogeneous EC states, as well as the pathways through which each endothelial state is likely to enhance neovasculogenesis and tissue regeneration following ischaemic injury were defined. Plasmalemma vesicle-associated protein (Plvap) was selected for further study, which showed an endothelial-specific and increased expression in both the ischaemic mouse and human heart, and played a direct role in regulating human endothelial proliferation in vitro.ConclusionWe present a single-cell gene expression atlas of cardiac specific resident ECs, and the transcriptional hierarchy underpinning endogenous vascular repair following MI. These data provide a rich resource that could assist in the development of new therapeutic interventions to augment endogenous myocardial perfusion and enhance regeneration in the injured heart.
Tau is a microtubule (MT)-stabilizing protein that is altered in Alzheimer's disease (AD) and other tauopathies. It is hypothesized that the hyperphosphorylated, conformationally altered, and multimeric forms of tau lead to a disruption of MT stability; however, direct evidence is lacking in vivo. In this study, an in vivo stable isotope-mass spectrometric technique was used to measure the turnover, or dynamicity, of MTs in brains of living animals. We demonstrated an age-dependent increase in MT dynamics in two different tau transgenic mouse models, 3xTg and rTg4510. MT hyperdynamicity was dependent on tau expression, since a reduction of transgene expression with doxycycline reversed the MT changes. Treatment of rTg4510 mice with the epothilone, BMS-241027, also restored MT dynamics to baseline levels. In addition, MT stabilization with BMS-241027 had beneficial effects on Morris water maze deficits, tau pathology, and neurodegeneration. Interestingly, pathological and functional benefits of BMS-241027 were observed at doses that only partially reversed MT hyperdynamicity. Together, these data suggest that tau-mediated loss of MT stability may contribute to disease progression and that very low doses of BMS-241027 may be useful in the treatment of AD and other tauopathies.
Rationale: Myocardial infarction (MI) is one of the leading causes of death worldwide and inflammation is central to the tissue response and patient outcomes. The 18kDa translocator protein (TSPO) has been utilized in positron emission tomography (PET) as an inflammatory biomarker. The aims of this study were to: 1) screen novel, fluorinated, TSPO radiotracers for susceptibility to the rs6971 genetic polymorphism using in vitro competition binding assays in human brain and heart, 2) assess whether the in vivo characteristics of our lead radiotracer, 18 F-LW223, are suitable for clinical translation and 3) validate whether 18 F-LW223 can detect macrophage driven inflammation in a rat myocardial infarction model. Methods: Fifty-one human brain and twenty-nine human heart tissue samples were screened for the rs6971 polymorphism. Competition binding assays were conducted with 3 H-PK11195 and the following ligands: PK11195, PBR28 and our novel compounds (AB5186 and LW223). Naive rats and mice were used for in vivo PET kinetic studies, radiometabolite studies and dosimetry experiments. Rats underwent permanent coronary artery ligation and were scanned using PET/CT with invasive input function at 7 days following MI. For quantification of PET signal in the hypoperfused myocardium, K 1 was used as a surrogate marker of perfusion to correct the binding potential for impaired radiotracer transfer from plasma to tissue (BP TC). Results: LW223 binding to TSPO was not susceptible to the rs6971 genetic polymorphism in human brain and heart samples. In rodents, 18 F-LW223 displayed a specific uptake consistent with TSPO expression, a slow metabolism in blood (62% of parent at 120 min), a high plasma free fraction of 38.5% and a suitable dosimetry profile Brain Tissue for Binding Assays Heart Tissue for Binding Assays
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