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Sox7-positive endothelial progenitors establish coronary arteries and govern ventricular compaction.

Ivy Kn ChiangDavid T HumphreysRichard J MillsPeter KaltzisShikha PachauriMatthew S GrausDiptarka SahaZhijian WuPaul YoungChoon Boon SimTara DavidsonAndres Hernandez-GarciaChad A ShawAlexander RenwickDaryl A ScottEnzo R PorrelloEmily S WongJames E HudsonKristy Red-HorseGonzalo Del Monte-NietoMathias Francois
Published in: EMBO reports (2023)
The cardiac endothelium influences ventricular chamber development by coordinating trabeculation and compaction. However, the endothelial-specific molecular mechanisms mediating this coordination are not fully understood. Here, we identify the Sox7 transcription factor as a critical cue instructing cardiac endothelium identity during ventricular chamber development. Endothelial-specific loss of Sox7 function in mice results in cardiac ventricular defects similar to non-compaction cardiomyopathy, with a change in the proportions of trabecular and compact cardiomyocytes in the mutant hearts. This phenotype is paralleled by abnormal coronary artery formation. Loss of Sox7 function disrupts the transcriptional regulation of the Notch pathway and connexins 37 and 40, which govern coronary arterial specification. Upon Sox7 endothelial-specific deletion, single-nuclei transcriptomics analysis identifies the depletion of a subset of Sox9/Gpc3-positive endocardial progenitor cells and an increase in erythro-myeloid cell lineages. Fate mapping analysis reveals that a subset of Sox7-null endothelial cells transdifferentiate into hematopoietic but not cardiomyocyte lineages. Our findings determine that Sox7 maintains cardiac endothelial cell identity, which is crucial to the cellular cross-talk that drives ventricular compaction and coronary artery development.
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