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By News Staff | February 5th 2008 12:54 AM | 1 comment | Track Comments
For the first time, scientists have described the transition of the flat, disc-shaped heart field into the primary linear heart tube. The investigations on zebrafish embryos were made by Stefan Rohr and Cécile Otten, members of the research group of Dr. Salim Abdelilah-Seyfried of the Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine (MDC) Berlin-Buch, Germany.

Currently, one of the most important areas to explore in developmental biology is how cellular transformation processes lead to the three-dimensional formation (morphogenesis) of organs. A better understanding of these processes is a basic requirement for elucidating congenital malformation of organs.

The heart, for instance, develops in the embryo from a flat disc, the so-called heart field. The tissue of this two-dimensional structure consists of a thin layer of epithelial cells. Similar cells line all inner organs, but also the skin and blood vessels.

Heart formation in the zebrafish: Transition of the flat, disc-shaped heart field into the primary linear heart tube, which then evolves into a multi-chamber, hollow organ. (Graphics: Stefan Rohr/Copyright: MDC)



Which cellular processes drive the formation of the three-dimensional heart tube that then evolves into a multi-chamber, hollow organ? Do individual cells migrate and form this hollow structure by fusing with other cells or does the whole heart field change its form? Until now, all of these were open questions in developmental biology.

Stefan Rohr, PhD student with Dr. Abdelilah-Seyfried, used zebrafish (Latin: Danio rerio) for his investigations because their embryos are transparent, allowing researchers to observe each cell of the living organism under the microscope. That is why these vertebrates are particularly interesting for developmental biologists.

Surprisingly, the cells of the right and left heart fields behave very differently, as Stefan Rohr was able to demonstrate. The cells of the right heart field form a kind of lip which, as a group, migrates underneath the cells of the left heart field, thereby “involuting” or turning on its own axis once again. This complex inversion of the right heart field generates the ventral floor, whereas the noninvoluting left heart field gives rise to the future roof of the heart tube.

This process is steered by various genes, which also regulate the right/left asymmetry of vertebrates. When the researchers switched off one of these genes, the cells often migrated in the wrong direction and the lip was formed in the wrong place.

Article:Stefan Rohr, Cécile Otten and Salim Abdelilah-Seyfried, Asymmetric Involution of the Myocardial Field Drives Heart Tube Formation in Zebrafish, Circulation Research. 2008;102:e12-e19 doi: 10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.107.165241

Comments

rholley's picture
Gottfried Plattner is, in spite of his name, a freeborn Englishman. . . To the casual observer he is singularly like any other Modern Languages Master in any other small private school. . . If you, as an ordinary careless person, were to bare his chest and feel his heart beating, you would probably find it quite like the heart of anyone else. But here you and the trained observer would part company. If you found his heart quite ordinary, the trained observer would find it quite otherwise. And once the thing was pointed out to you, you too would perceive the peculiarity easily enough. It is that Gottfried’s heart beats on the right side of his body.

So runs The Plattner Story by H.G.Wells, in which the eponymous gentleman is blown out of our space and subsequently re-enters having been turned around, as it were, as if on the opposite side of a Möbius strip (though perhaps a Klein Bottle would be a better analogy).

However, to our modern knowledge, this story would not stand up, since with all his molecules reversed the hero would have been unable to digest any of our carbohydrates, proteins, or any other chiral molecules (nyaah – spoilsport!).

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