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YAP Overcomes Mechanical Barriers to Induce Mitotic Rounding and Adult Cardiomyocyte Division. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study focuses on understanding how adult heart cells (cardiomyocytes) remain in a state of cell cycle arrest and how the YAP5SA protein can help them re-enter the cell cycle, offering insights into their growth and division.
  • - Researchers used various methods, including clonal analyses and single-cell RNA sequencing, to examine the characteristics and behaviors of cardiomyocytes influenced by YAP5SA.
  • - Findings indicate that while YAP5SA cardiomyocytes can efficiently divide after exiting the cycle, there are barriers, like the checkpoint activity from P21, that hinder their progression through the cycle, suggesting new ways to understand and potentially manipulate cardiac cell division.

Article Abstract

Background: Many specialized cells in adult organs acquire a state of cell cycle arrest and quiescence through unknown mechanisms. Our limited understanding of mammalian cell cycle arrest is derived primarily from cell culture models. Adult mammalian cardiomyocytes, a classic example of cell cycle arrested cells, exit the cell cycle postnatally and remain in an arrested state for the life of the organism. Cardiomyocytes can be induced to re-enter the cell cycle by YAP5SA, an active form of the Hippo signaling pathway effector YAP.

Methods: We performed clonal analyses to determine the cell cycle kinetics of YAP5SA cardiomyocytes. We also performed single-cell RNA sequencing, marker gene analysis, and functional studies to examine how YAP5SA cardiomyocytes progress through the cell cycle.

Results: We discovered that YAP5SA-expressing cardiomyocytes divided efficiently, with >20% of YAP5SA cardiomyocyte clones containing ≥2 cardiomyocytes. YAP5SA cardiomyocytes re-entered cell cycle at the G1/S transition and had an S phase lasting ≈48 hours. Sarcomere disassembly is required for cardiomyocyte progression from S to G2 phase and the induction of mitotic rounding. Although oscillatory Cdk expression was induced in YAP5SA cardiomyocytes, these cells inefficiently progressed through G2 phase. This is improved by inhibiting P21 function, implicating checkpoint activity as an additional barrier to YAP5SA-induced cardiomyocyte division.

Conclusions: Our data reveal that YAP5SA overcomes the mechanically constrained myocardial microenvironment to induce mitotic rounding with cardiomyocyte division, thus providing new insights into the in vivo mechanisms that maintain cell cycle quiescence in adult mammals.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.123.066004DOI Listing
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11671297PMC

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