Development 130, e1304 (2003)
Copyright © 2003 The Company of Biologists Limited
Flying to the heart of heart development
Striking molecular and developmental similarities in heart development
exist between flies and vertebrates. For example, both develop from
bilaterally symmetrical rows of mesodermal cells that fuse to form a heart
tube, which in flies consists of outer pericardial and inner myocardial
(cardioblast) cells. The factors that regulate heart development are also
conserved between flies and vertebrates, including tinman (vertebrate
NKX2.5), dpp (BMP2/4) and pannier (pnr, GATA
transcription factor homologue). Now three Development papers shed
new light on heart cell lineages and on the transcriptional mechanisms that
control Drosophila heart development findings that will
inform studies of vertebrate cardiogenesis. When Alvarez et al. investigated
the cardiogenic function of pnr and pointed (pnt),
they found that they act sequentially: pnr acts early in mesoderm
development to bring about cardiac mesoderm (CM) formation, and pnt
regulates CM cell fate choice. In its absence, cardioblasts form at the
expense of pericardial cells, but only in the posterior domain of the heart.
Importantly, their findings on p.
3015 indicate that a developmental and genetic distinction exists
between the anterior and posterior regions of the heart, with potential
functional consequences. Klinedinst and Bodmer, on
p. 3027, also investigated
pnr function and that of its binding partner u-shaped
(ush) in loss-of-function and germ-layer-specific rescue experiments.
They report that pnr and ush are required to initiate and
maintain cardiogenesis, respectively, and for myocardial and pericardial cell
fates to form. Pnr is also required in the ectoderm, where it might mediate
and maintain cardiogenic dpp signalling. In a different approach, Han
and Bodmer explored heart cell lineages by arresting cardiac cell divisions at
various developmental stages. They found, on
p. 3039, that the non-dividing
progenitors of symmetric cell lineages adopt myocardial- or pericardial-only
fates, whereas those of asymmetric divisions adopt a myocardial fate through
the inhibition of Notch signalling.

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Related articles in Development:
- pannier and pointedP2 act sequentially to regulate Drosophila heart development
- Alejandra D. Alvarez, Weiyang Shi, Beth A. Wilson, and James B. Skeath
Development 2003 130: 3015-3026.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
- Gata factor Pannier is required to establish competence for heart progenitor formation
- Susan L. Klinedinst and Rolf Bodmer
Development 2003 130: 3027-3038.
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- Myogenic cells fates are antagonized by Notch only in asymmetric lineages of the Drosophila heart, with or without cell division
- Zhe Han and Rolf Bodmer
Development 2003 130: 3039-3051.
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