Scientists have revealed the precise order and timing of hundreds of
genetic "switches" required to construct a fully functional heart from
embryonic heart cells -- providing new clues into the genetic basis for
some forms of congenital heart disease
(Sep. 13, 2012) — Scientists at the Gladstone
Institutes have revealed the precise order and timing of hundreds of
genetic "switches" required to construct a fully functional heart from
embryonic heart cells -- providing new clues into the genetic basis for
some forms of congenital heart disease.
In a study being published online today in the journal Cell,
researchers in the laboratory of Gladstone Senior Investigator Benoit
Bruneau, PhD, employed stem cell technology, next-generation DNA
sequencing and computing tools to piece together the instruction manual,
or "genomic blueprint" for how a heart becomes a heart. These findings
offer renewed hope for combating life-threatening heart defects such as
arrhythmias (irregular heart beat) and ventricular septal defects
("holes in the heart").
"Congenital heart defects are the most common type of birth defects
-- affecting more than 35,000 newborn babies in the United States each
year," said Dr. Bruneau, who is the associate director of cardiovascular
research at Gladstone, an independent and nonprofit biomedical-research
organization. "But how these defects develop at the genetic level has
been difficult to pinpoint because research has focused on a small set
of genes. Here, we approach heart formation with a wide-angle lens by
looking at the entirety of the genetic material that gives heart cells
their unique identity."
The news comes at a time of emerging importance for the biological
process called "epigenetics," in which a non-genetic factor impacts a
cell's genetic makeup early during development -- but sometimes with
longer-term consequences. All of the cells in an organism contain the
same DNA, but the epigenetic instructions encoded in specific DNA
sequences give the cell its identity. Epigenetics is of particular
interest in heart formation, as the incorrect on-and-off switching of
genes during fetal development can lead to congenital heart disease --
some forms of which may not be apparent until adulthood.
In this research -- conducted in large part at Gladstone's
Roddenberry Center for Stem Cell Biology and Medicine, as well as in
collaboration with the laboratory of Laurie Boyer, PhD, at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology -- the scientists took embryonic
stem cells from mice and reprogrammed them into beating heart cells by
mimicking embryonic development in a petri dish. Next, they extracted
the DNA from developing and mature heart cells, using an advanced
gene-sequencing technique called ChIP-seq that lets scientists "see" the
epigenetic signatures written in the DNA.
"But simply finding these signatures was only half the battle -- we
next had to decipher which aspects of heart formation they encoded,"
said Jeffrey Alexander, a Gladstone and UCSF graduate student and one of
the paper's lead authors. "To do that, we harnessed the computing power
of the Gladstone Bioinformatics Core. This allowed us to take the
mountains of data collected from gene sequencing and organize it into a
readable, meaningful blueprint for how a heart becomes a heart."
The team made some unexpected discoveries. They found that groups of
genes appear to work together in heart cells in a coordinated fashion --
switching on and off as a group at designated times during embryonic
development. The scientists not only identified a whole host of new
genes involved in heart formation, but they also refined exactly how
these newly discovered genes interact with previously known genes.
The human-health implications of mapping the genomic blueprint of the
heart are far reaching. Now that scientists understand how these genes
control the heart, they can begin to piece together how heart disease
disrupts this regulation. Eventually, they can look for therapies to
prevent, interrupt or counteract those disruptions in children who
suffer from congenital heart disease.
"Our findings reveal new clues as to how complex genetic and
epigenetic patterns are precisely regulated during heart formation,"
said Dr. Boyer. "In particular, our identification of key segments of
the genome that contribute to this process will hopefully allow us to
identify the genetic causes of many forms of congenital heart disease --
an important first step in the fight against this devastating disease."
"Next, we hope to examine the DNA of patients living with congenital
heart disease, in the hopes that we can pinpoint the specific genetic
disruption that caused their heart defect," said Dr. Bruneau, who is
also a professor of pediatrics at the University of California, San
Francisco, with which Gladstone is affiliated. "Once we identify that
disruption, we can begin exploring ways to restore normal gene function
during early heart formation -- and reduce the number of babies born
with debilitating, and sometimes fatal, congenital heart defects."
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