Endothelin-induced conversion of embryonic heart muscle cells into impulse-conducting Purkinje fibers
- Department of Cell Biology and Anatomy, Cornell University Medical College, 1300 York Avenue, New York, NY 10021; and *Department of Cell Biology and Anatomy, Cardiovascular Developmental Biology Center, Medical University of South Carolina, 171 Ashley Avenue, Charleston, SC 29425-2204
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Communicated by Elizabeth D. Hay, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA (received for review January 12, 1998)
Abstract
A regular heart beat is dependent on a specialized network of pacemaking and conductive cells. There has been a longstanding controversy regarding the developmental origin of these cardiac tissues which also manifest neural-like properties. Recently, we have shown conclusively that during chicken embryogenesis, impulse-conducting Purkinje cells are recruited from myocytes in spatial association with developing coronary arteries. Here, we report that cultured embryonic myocytes convert to a Purkinje cell phenotype after exposure to the vascular cytokine, endothelin. This inductive response declined gradually during development. These results yield further evidence for a role of arteriogenesis in the induction of impulse-conducting Purkinje cells within the heart muscle lineage and also may provide a basis for tissue engineering of cardiac pacemaking and conductive cells.
Footnotes
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↵ † To whom reprint requests should be addressed. e-mail: tmikaw{at}mail.med.cornell.edu.
- ABBREVIATIONS:
- ET,
- endothelin;
- Cx,
- Connexin;
- sMHC,
- slow myosin heavy chain
- Copyright © 1998, The National Academy of Sciences








