The formation of intramyocardial blood vessels is critical for normal heart development and tissue repair after infarction. We report here expression of the Wilms' tumor gene-1, Wt1, in coronary vessels, which could contribute to the defective cardiac vascularization in Wt1-/- mice. Furthermore, the high-affinity neurotrophin receptor TrkB, which is expressed in the epicardium and subepicardial blood vessels, was nearly absent from Wt1-deficient hearts. Activation of Wt1 in an inducible cell line significantly enhanced TrkB expression. The promoter of NTRK2, the gene encoding TrkB, was stimulated approximately 10-fold by transient cotransfection of a Wt1 expression construct. The critical DNA-binding site for activation of the NTRK2 promoter by Wt1 was delineated by DNase I footprint analysis and electrophoretic mobility shift assay. Transgenic experiments revealed that the identified Wt1 consensus motif in the NTRK2 promoter was necessary to direct expression of a reporter gene to the epicardium and the developing vasculature of embryonic mouse hearts. Finally, mice with a disrupted Ntrk2 gene lacked a significant proportion of their intramyocardial blood vessels. These findings demonstrate that transcriptional activation of the TrkB neurotrophin receptor gene by the Wilms' tumor suppressor Wt1 is a crucial mechanism for normal vascularization of the developing heart.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1276736 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/gad.346405 | DOI Listing |
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