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Heart defects are the most common birth defect requiring medical intervention. The most common heart defects involve septation and alignment of the arterial pole of the
heart. The primary focus of my laboratory is the development of the arterial pole of the heart. For more than 25 years, our group has studied the role of neural crest
cells in the functional and structural development of the arterial pole by using several different animal models of human congenital heart defects. Neural crest cells are
vital for normal development of the arterial pole as they are required for division of the aorta and pulmonary trunk from a single primordial vessel. Ablation of the
neural crest cells in chick results in a single outflow vessel or persistent truncus arteriosus. In addition, to normal outflow septation, cells from the neural crest are
important in regulating the availability of growth factors in the developing pharynx. In the absence of neural crest cells, fibroblast growth factor (FGF8) is
overabundant and interferes with various developmental processes in the heart and pharynx. One of the places where overabundant FGF causes abnormal development is in the
induction and differentiation of myocardium from a newly identified secondary heart field. The secondary heart field is the source of the cells that form the myocardium
and smooth muscle that comprise the definitive arterial pole of the heart. This secondary source of myocardium in the pharynx, adds to the lengthening outflow tract after
initial heart tube formation. Without the addition of myocardium from the secondary heart field, the outflow is shortened and cannot align the aorta and pulmonary
arterial trunks with the ventricles appropriately. Defects of outflow alignment such as tetralogy of Fallot and double outlet right ventricle may therefore be the result
of abnormal development of the secondary heart field.
Ablation of the secondary heart field itself leads to pulmonary atresia or stenosis. Thus regulation of the factors that control secondary heart field development is
critical to normal arterial pole development. We have recently shown that the arterial pole in the zebrafish develops similar to that of the chick and mouse prior to
septation. Thus, we are able to perform candidate and forward genetic screens in zebrafish to identify potential genes that are important in normal arterial pole
development.
A new project in the lab involves PCB126 which has been shown in epidemiology studies to be associated with hypoplastic left heart syndrome in human fetuses. We have
used zebrafish to show that the initial event following PCB126 exposure is failure of newly differentiated cardiomyocytes to increase in size. This failure in
developmental hypertrophy leads secondarily to cell cycle arrest. Thus, we have initiated studies of the pathways that control myocardial developmental hypertrophy.
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