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Cardiac endothelial cells maintain open chromatin and expression of cardiomyocyte myofibrillar genes

Nora Yucel, Jessie Axsom, Yifan Yang, Li Li, Joshua H. Rhoades, Zoltàn Arany

2020eLife36 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Endothelial cells (ECs) are widely heterogenous depending on tissue and vascular localization. Jambusaria et al. recently demonstrated that ECs in various tissues surprisingly possess mRNA signatures of their underlying parenchyma. The mechanism underlying this observation remains unexplained, and could include mRNA contamination during cell isolation, in vivo mRNA paracrine transfer from parenchymal cells to ECs, or cell-autonomous expression of these mRNAs in ECs. Here, we use a combination of bulk RNASeq, single-cell RNASeq datasets, in situ mRNA hybridization, and most importantly ATAC-Seq of FACS-isolated nuclei, to show that cardiac ECs actively express cardiomyocyte myofibril (CMF) genes and have open chromatin at CMF gene promoters. These open chromatin sites are enriched for sites targeted by cardiac transcription factors, and closed upon expansion of ECs in culture. Together, these data demonstrate unambiguously that the expression of CMF genes in ECs is cell-autonomous, and not simply a result of technical contamination or paracrine transfers of mRNAs, and indicate that local cues in the heart in vivo unexpectedly maintain fully open chromatin in ECs at genes previously thought limited to cardiomyocytes.

Topics & Concepts

ChromatinBiologyCell biologyParacrine signallingGene expressionGeneRegulation of gene expressionIn situ hybridizationChromatin immunoprecipitationTranscription factorPromoterMolecular biologyGeneticsReceptorSingle-cell and spatial transcriptomicsCongenital heart defects researchCancer-related molecular mechanisms research
Cardiac endothelial cells maintain open chromatin and expression of cardiomyocyte myofibrillar genes | Litcius