This is a preprint.
Defining Cardiac Nerve Architecture During Development, Disease, and Regeneration
- PMID: 36711742
- PMCID: PMC9881855
- DOI: 10.1101/2022.12.31.522405
Defining Cardiac Nerve Architecture During Development, Disease, and Regeneration
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Parasympathetic and sympathetic axons are bundled in the cardiac ventricles and undergo physiological reinnervation during heart regeneration.iScience. 2023 Aug 25;26(10):107709. doi: 10.1016/j.isci.2023.107709. eCollection 2023 Oct 20. iScience. 2023. PMID: 37674983 Free PMC article.
Abstract
Cardiac nerves regulate neonatal mouse heart regeneration and are susceptible to pathological remodeling following adult injury. Understanding cardiac nerve remodeling can lead to new strategies to promote cardiac repair. Our current understanding of cardiac nerve architecture has been limited to two-dimensional analysis. Here, we use genetic models, whole-mount imaging, and three-dimensional modeling tools to define cardiac nerve architecture and neurovascular association during development, disease, and regeneration. Our results demonstrate that cardiac nerves sequentially associate with coronary veins and arteries during development. Remarkably, our results reveal that parasympathetic nerves densely innervate the ventricles. Furthermore, parasympathetic and sympathetic nerves develop synchronously and are intertwined throughout the ventricles. Importantly, the regenerating myocardium reestablishes physiological innervation, in stark contrast to the non-regenerating heart. Mechanistically, reinnervation during regeneration is dependent on collateral artery formation. Our results reveal how defining cardiac nerve remodeling during homeostasis, disease, and regeneration can identify new therapies for cardiac disease.
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